1,937 results on '"Hollis, G"'
Search Results
2. Fully automated determination of robotic pedicle screw accuracy and precision utilizing computer vision algorithms
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Groisser, Benjamin N., Thakur, Ankush, Hillstrom, Howard J., Adhiyaman, Akshitha, Zucker, Colson, Du, Jerry, Cunningham, Matthew, Hresko, M. Timothy, Haddas, Ram, Blanco, John, Potter, Hollis G., Mintz, Douglas N., Breighner, Ryan E., Heyer, Jessica H., and Widmann, Roger F.
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- 2024
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3. Exclusive $\pi^{-}$ Electroproduction off the Neutron in Deuterium in the Resonance Region
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Tian, Y., Gothe, R. W., Mokeev, V. I., Hollis, G., Amaryan, M. J., Armstrong, W. R., Atac, H., Avakian, H., Barion, L., Battaglieri, M., Bedlinskiy, I., Benkel, B., Benmokhtar, F., Bianconi, A., Biondo, L., Biselli, A., Bossù, F., Boiarinov, S., Bondì, M., Brinkmann, K. T., Briscoe, W. J., Bueltmann, S., Bulumulla, D., Burkert, V. D., Capobianco, R., Carman, D. S., Carvajal, J. C., Celentano, A., Chesnokov, V., Chetry, T., Ciullo, G., Clash, G., Cole, P. L., Contalbrigo, M., Costantini, G., D'Angelo, A., Dashyan, N., De Vita, R., Defurne, M., Deur, A., Diehl, S., Djalali, C., Dupre, R., Egiyan, H., Alaoui, A. El, Fassi, L. El, Elouadrhiri, L., Eugenio, P., Fegan, S., Filippi, A., Gavalian, G., Gilfoyle, G. P., Girod, F. X., Golubenko, A. A., Gosta, G., Griffioen, K., Guidal, M., Hakobyan, H., Hattawy, M., Hayward, T. B., Hobart, A., Holtrop, M., Ilieva, Y., Ireland, D. G., Isupov, E. L., Jenkins, D., Jo, H. S., Joo, K., Joosten, S., Keller, D., Khanal, A., Khandaker, M., Kim, A., Kim, W., Klein, F. J., Kripko, A., Kubarovsky, V., Lagerquist, V., Lanza, L., Leali, M., Lenisa, P., Livingston, K., MacGregor, I. . J . D., Marchand, D., Marsicano, L., Mascagna, V., McKinnon, B., Migliorati, S., Mineeva, T., Mirazita, M., Camacho, C. Munoz, Nadel-Turonski, P., Naidoo, P., Neupane, K., Newton, J., Niccolai, S., Nicol, M., Niculescu, G., Osipenko, M., Pandey, P., Paolone, M., Pappalardo, L. L., Paremuzyan, R., Park, K., Pasyuk, E., Paul, S. J., Phelps, W., Pilleux, N., Počanić, D., Pogorelko, O., Poudel, J., Price, J. W., Prok, Y., Reed, T., Ripani, M., Ritman, J., Rizzo, A., Rosner, G., Sabatié, F., Salgado, C., Schadmand, S., Schmidt, A., Schumacher, R. A., Shirokov, E. V., Shrestha, U., Simmerling, P., Sokhan, D., Sparveris, N., Stepanyan, S., Strakovsky, I. I., Strauch, S., Tyson, R., Ungaro, M., Venturelli, L., Voskanyan, H., Voutier, E., Watts, D. P., Wei, K., Wei, X., Wood, M. H., Yale, B., Zachariou, N., and Zhang, J.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
New results for the exclusive and quasi-free cross sections off neutrons bound in deuterium ${\gamma}_vn(p) \rightarrow p{\pi}^{-} (p)$ are presented over a wide final state hadron angle range with a kinematic coverage of the invariant mass ($W$) up to 1.825 GeV and the virtual photon four-momentum transfer squared ($Q^{2}$) from 0.4 to 1.0 GeV$^2$. The exclusive structure functions were extracted and their Legendre moments were obtained. Final-state-interaction contributions have been kinematically separated from the extracted quasi-free cross sections off bound neutrons solely based on the analysis of the experimental data. These new results will serve as long-awaited input for phenomenological analyses to extract the $Q^{2}$ evolution of previously unavailable $n \to N^{*}$ electroexcitation amplitudes and to improve state-of-the-art models of neutrino scattering off nuclei by augmenting the already available results from free protons., Comment: The author list has been updated
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- 2022
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4. Association of Total Hip Arthroplasty Flexural Rigidity With Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Histological Findings
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Sacher, Sara E., Baral, Elexis C., Wright, Timothy M., Bauer, Thomas W., Li, Qian, Padgett, Douglas E., Potter, Hollis G., and Koff, Matthew F.
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- 2024
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5. Stretchable self-tuning MRI receive coils based on liquid metal technology (LiquiTune)
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Motovilova, Elizaveta, Tan, Ek Tsoon, Taracila, Victor, Vincent, Jana M., Grafendorfer, Thomas, Shin, James, Potter, Hollis G., Robb, Fraser J. L., Sneag, Darryl B., and Winkler, Simone A.
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Physics - Medical Physics - Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging systems rely on signal detection via radiofrequency coil arrays which, ideally, need to provide both bendability and form-fitting stretchability to conform to the imaging volume. However, most commercial coils are rigid and of fixed size with a substantial mean offset distance of the coil from the anatomy, which compromises the spatial resolution and diagnostic image quality as well as patient comfort. Here, we propose a soft and stretchable receive coil concept based on liquid metal and ultra-stretchable polymer that conforms closely to a desired anatomy. Moreover, its smart geometry provides a self-tuning mechanism to maintain a stable resonance frequency over a wide range of elongation levels. Theoretical analysis and numerical simulations were experimentally confirmed and demonstrated that the proposed coil withstood the unwanted frequency detuning typically observed with other stretchable coils (0.4% for the proposed coil as compared to 4% for a comparable control coil). Moreover, the signal-to-noise ratio of the proposed coil increased by up to 60% as compared to a typical, rigid, commercial coil.
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- 2021
6. Synthetic Biphasic Scaffolds versus Microfracture for Articular Cartilage Defects of the Knee: A Retrospective Comparative Study
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Wang, Dean, Nawabi, Danyal H, Krych, Aaron J, Jones, Kristofer J, Nguyen, Joseph, Elbuluk, Ameer M, Farshad-Amacker, Nadja A, Potter, Hollis G, and Williams, Riley J
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Arthritis ,Clinical Research ,Musculoskeletal ,Activities of Daily Living ,Adult ,Cartilage ,Articular ,Female ,Fractures ,Stress ,Humans ,Male ,Retrospective Studies ,Treatment Outcome ,knee ,cartilage ,scaffold ,TruFit ,microfracture ,MRI ,Biomedical Engineering ,Medical Biotechnology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to compare the results of a biphasic synthetic scaffold (TruFit, Smith & Nephew) to microfracture for the treatment of knee cartilage defects and identify patient- and lesion-specific factors that influence outcomes.DesignProspectively collected data from 132 patients (mean age, 41.8 years; 69% male) with isolated chondral or osteochondral femoral defects treated with biphasic synthetic scaffolds (n = 66) or microfracture (n = 66) were reviewed. Clinical outcomes were evaluated longitudinally over 5 years with the Short Form-36 (SF-36), Activities of Daily Living of the Knee Outcome Survey (KOS-ADL), International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC), and Marx Activity Scale. Cartilage-sensitive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed to evaluate osseous integration and cartilage fill in a subgroup of patients. Multivariate regression analysis was used to identify predictors of clinical outcomes within the scaffold group.ResultsBoth groups demonstrated clinically significant improvements in knee clinical scores over 5 years (P < 0.01). There were no significant differences in KOS-ADL and IKDC scores between groups up to 5 years postoperatively. Marx activity level scores in the microfracture group declined over time, while significant improvements in activity level scores were observed in the scaffold group over 5 years (P < 0.01). Good-quality tissue fill and cartilage isointensity were more often observed in the scaffold group compared with the microfracture group, particularly with longer time intervals. Increasing age, high body mass index, prior microfracture, and traumatic etiology were predictors for inferior outcomes in the scaffold group.ConclusionsActivity level and MRI appearance following treatment of cartilage lesions with the biphasic synthetic scaffold were superior to microfracture over time in this nonrandomized, retrospective comparison.
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- 2021
7. CT-like Contrast for Bone Imaging with ZTE-MRI
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Breighner, Ryan E., Potter, Hollis G., Du, Jiang, editor, and Bydder, Graeme M., editor
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- 2023
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8. Effects of the Competitive Season and Off‐Season on Knee Articular Cartilage in Collegiate Basketball Players Using Quantitative MRI: A Multicenter Study
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Rubin, Elka B, Mazzoli, Valentina, Black, Marianne S, Young, Katherine, Desai, Arjun D, Koff, Matthew F, Sreedhar, Ashwin, Kogan, Feliks, Safran, Marc R, Vincentini, Dominic J, Knox, Katelin A, Yamada, Tomoo, McCabe, Andrew, Majumdar, Sharmila, Potter, Hollis G, and Gold, Garry E
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Arthritis ,Chronic Pain ,Pain Research ,Musculoskeletal ,Basketball ,Cartilage ,Articular ,Cohort Studies ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Quality of Life ,Seasons ,articular cartilage ,basketball ,general ,imaging ,knee ,magnetic resonance ,relaxometry ,swimming ,Physical Sciences ,Engineering ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundInjuries to the articular cartilage in the knee are common in jumping athletes, particularly high-level basketball players. Unfortunately, these are often diagnosed at a late stage of the disease process, after tissue loss has already occurred.Purpose/hypothesisTo evaluate longitudinal changes in knee articular cartilage and knee function in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) basketball players and their evolution over the competitive season and off-season.Study typeLongitudinal, multisite cohort study.PopulationThirty-two NCAA Division 1 athletes: 22 basketball players and 10 swimmers.Field strength/sequenceBilateral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) using a combined T1ρ and T2 magnetization-prepared angle-modulated portioned k-space spoiled gradient-echo snapshots (MAPSS) sequence at 3T.AssessmentWe calculated T2 and T1ρ relaxation times to compare compositional cartilage changes between three timepoints: preseason 1, postseason 1, and preseason 2. Knee Osteoarthritis Outcome Scores (KOOS) were used to assess knee health.Statistical testsOne-way variance model hypothesis test, general linear model, and chi-squared test.ResultsIn the femoral articular cartilage of all athletes, we saw a global decrease in T2 and T1ρ relaxation times during the competitive season (all P
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- 2021
9. Rotating Hinge Revision Total Knee Arthroplasty Provides Greater Arc of Motion Gains for Patients Who Have Severe Arthrofibrosis
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Bauer, Thomas W., Blevins, Jason L., Bogner, Eric A., Bostrom, Mathias P., Carli, Alberto, Chalmers, Brian P., Figgie, Mark P., Della Valle, Alejandro Gonzalez, Haas, Steven B., Jerabek, Seth A., Jules-Elysee, Kethy M., Kirksey, Meghan A., Koff, Matthew F., Lessard, Samantha, Mayman, David J., McLawhorn, Alexander S., Pannellini, Tania, Parks, Michael L., Potter, Hollis G., Rodeo, Scott A., Schiller, Nicholas, Sculco, Thomas P., Tam, Kathleen, Verwiel, Chloe, Westrich, Geoffrey H., Wright, Timothy M., Youssef, Mark, Liow, Ming Han Lincoln, Flevas, Dimitrios A., Braun, Sebastian, Nocon, Allina, Lee, Gwo-Chin, and Sculco, Peter K.
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- 2024
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10. Multiparametric MRI characterization of knee articular cartilage and subchondral bone shape in collegiate basketball players
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Gao, Kenneth T, Pedoia, Valentina, Young, Katherine A, Kogan, Feliks, Koff, Matthew F, Gold, Garry E, Potter, Hollis G, and Majumdar, Sharmila
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Engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Biomedical Imaging ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Musculoskeletal ,Athletes ,Basketball ,Cartilage ,Articular ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Swimming ,Young Adult ,basketball ,bone shape ,knee articular cartilage ,magnetic resonance imaging ,T-1 rho- and T-2-relaxation ,T1ρ- and T2-relaxation ,Clinical Sciences ,Human Movement and Sports Sciences ,Orthopedics ,Biomedical engineering ,Sports science and exercise - Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is commonly used to evaluate the morphology of the knee in athletes with high-knee impact; however, complex repeated loading of the joint can lead to biochemical and structural degeneration that occurs before visible morphological changes. In this study, we utilized multiparametric quantitative MRI to compare morphology and composition of articular cartilage and subchondral bone shape between young athletes with high-knee impact (basketball players; n = 40) and non-knee impact (swimmers; n = 25). We implemented voxel-based relaxometry to register all cases to a single reference space and performed a localized compositional analysis of T 1ρ - and T 2 -relaxation times on a voxel-by-voxel basis. Additionally, statistical shape modeling was employed to extract differences in subchondral bone shape between the two groups. Evaluation of cartilage composition demonstrated a significant prolongation of relaxation times in the medial femoral and tibial compartments and in the posterolateral femur of basketball players in comparison to relaxation times in the same cartilage compartments of swimmers. The compositional analysis also showed depth-dependent differences with prolongation of the superficial layer in basketball players. For subchondral bone shape, three total modes were found to be significantly different between groups and related to the relative sizes of the tibial plateaus, intercondylar eminences, and the curvature and concavity of the patellar lateral facet. In summary, this study identified several characteristics associated with a high-knee impact which may expand our understanding of local degenerative patterns in this population.
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- 2021
11. Significantly Worse Fixation of Cemented Patellar Components on Multiacquisition Variable-Resonance Image Combination Magnetic Resonance Imaging Compared to Femoral and Tibial Components: A Cause for Concern?
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Debbi, Eytan M., Mayman, David J., Sapountzis, Nicolas, Hawes, Joseph, Cororaton, Agnes D., Potter, Hollis G., Haas, Steven B., and Chalmers, Brian P.
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- 2023
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12. Taboo language across the globe: A multi-lab study
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Sulpizio, S, Gunther, F, Badan, L, Basclain, B, Brysbaert, M, Chan, Y, Ciaccio, L, Dudschig, C, Dunabeitia, J, Fasoli, F, Ferrand, L, Filipovic Durdevic, D, Guerra, E, Hollis, G, Job, R, Jornkokgoud, K, Kahraman, H, Kgolo-Lotshwao, N, Kinoshita, S, Kos, J, Lee, L, Lee, N, Mackenzie, I, Manojlovic, M, Manouilidou, C, Martinic, M, del Carmen Mendez, M, Misic, K, Chiangmai, N, Nikolaev, A, Oganyan, M, Rusconi, P, Samo, G, Tse, C, Westbury, C, Wongupparaj, P, Yap, M, Marelli, M, Sulpizio S., Gunther F., Badan L., Basclain B., Brysbaert M., Chan Y. L., Ciaccio L. A., Dudschig C., Dunabeitia J. A., Fasoli F., Ferrand L., Filipovic Durdevic D., Guerra E., Hollis G., Job R., Jornkokgoud K., Kahraman H., Kgolo-Lotshwao N., Kinoshita S., Kos J., Lee L., Lee N. H., Mackenzie I. G., Manojlovic M., Manouilidou C., Martinic M., del Carmen Mendez M., Misic K., Chiangmai N. N., Nikolaev A., Oganyan M., Rusconi P., Samo G., Tse C. -S., Westbury C., Wongupparaj P., Yap M. J., Marelli M., Sulpizio, S, Gunther, F, Badan, L, Basclain, B, Brysbaert, M, Chan, Y, Ciaccio, L, Dudschig, C, Dunabeitia, J, Fasoli, F, Ferrand, L, Filipovic Durdevic, D, Guerra, E, Hollis, G, Job, R, Jornkokgoud, K, Kahraman, H, Kgolo-Lotshwao, N, Kinoshita, S, Kos, J, Lee, L, Lee, N, Mackenzie, I, Manojlovic, M, Manouilidou, C, Martinic, M, del Carmen Mendez, M, Misic, K, Chiangmai, N, Nikolaev, A, Oganyan, M, Rusconi, P, Samo, G, Tse, C, Westbury, C, Wongupparaj, P, Yap, M, Marelli, M, Sulpizio S., Gunther F., Badan L., Basclain B., Brysbaert M., Chan Y. L., Ciaccio L. A., Dudschig C., Dunabeitia J. A., Fasoli F., Ferrand L., Filipovic Durdevic D., Guerra E., Hollis G., Job R., Jornkokgoud K., Kahraman H., Kgolo-Lotshwao N., Kinoshita S., Kos J., Lee L., Lee N. H., Mackenzie I. G., Manojlovic M., Manouilidou C., Martinic M., del Carmen Mendez M., Misic K., Chiangmai N. N., Nikolaev A., Oganyan M., Rusconi P., Samo G., Tse C. -S., Westbury C., Wongupparaj P., Yap M. J., and Marelli M.
- Abstract
The use of taboo words represents one of the most common and arguably universal linguistic behaviors, fulfilling a wide range of psychological and social functions. However, in the scientific literature, taboo language is poorly characterized, and how it is realized in different languages and populations remains largely unexplored. Here we provide a database of taboo words, collected from different linguistic communities (Study 1, N = 1046), along with their speaker-centered semantic characterization (Study 2, N = 455 for each of six rating dimensions), covering 13 languages and 17 countries from all five permanently inhabited continents. Our results show that, in all languages, taboo words are mainly characterized by extremely low valence and high arousal, and very low written frequency. However, a significant amount of cross-country variability in words’ tabooness and offensiveness proves the importance of community-specific sociocultural knowledge in the study of taboo language.
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- 2024
13. Diffusion-weighted MRI of total hip arthroplasty for classification of synovial reactions: A pilot study
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Gao, Madeleine A., Tan, Ek T., Neri, John P., Li, Qian, Burge, Alissa J., Potter, Hollis G., Koch, Kevin M., and Koff, Matthew F.
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- 2023
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14. Multiacquisition Variable-Resonance Image Combination Magnetic Resonance Imaging to Study Detailed Bone Apposition and Fixation of Cementless Knee System Compared to Cemented Total Knee Replacements
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Gina M. Mosich, MD, Hollis G. Potter, MD, Matthew F. Koff, PhD, Sara E. Sacher, MS, Mithun Mishu, BA, and Geoffrey H. Westrich, MD
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MAVRIC MRI ,Cementless knee ,Cemented knee ,Fixation ,Implant component ,Implant design ,Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 - Abstract
Background: The ability to utilize magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to assess bony fixation may allow a better understanding of implant design and longevity. A new cementless total knee arthroplasty (TKA) was introduced, and we hypothesized that this cementless system would show similar fixation compared to a cemented system as assessed by multispectral MRI. Methods: Multiacquisition variable-resonance image combination selective MRI was performed in 20 patients implanted with a cementless TKA. A matched control group of 20 patients who had a cemented TKA was also evaluated. Each patellar, femoral, and tibial component was graded globally as well as by specific zones. The patella zones were medial, lateral, superior, and inferior. The femoral and tibial components were divided into 4 zones: anteromedial, anterolateral, posteromedial, and posterolateral. Integration grades were performed for each zone as follows: (1) normal, (2) fibrous tissue, (3) fluid interface, (4) osteolysis. A Chi-square test was performed to detect differences in level of integration grades between patients with cemented and those with cementless TKA. Results: At average 16-month follow-up, the cementless group grading noted 0/80 (0%) vs 2/76 (2.63%) patellar zones with fluid interface, 0/80 (0%) vs 26/80 (32.5%) femoral zones with fibrous tissue, and 10/80 (12.5%) vs 17/80 (21.25%) tibial zones with fibrous tissue. The analysis showed patellar (P < .001), femoral (P < .001), and tibial (P < .001) components had improved fixation and less percentage of fibrous tissue and fluid present in the cementless TKA. Conclusions: Utilizing metal suppression MRI, a newer cementless knee implant demonstrated excellent biologic fixation and improved fixation compared to the cemented group.
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- 2022
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15. Exuberant Rice Body Formation Associated with Adverse Local Tissue Reaction After Hip Resurfacing Arthroplasty: A Case Report and Review of the Literature
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Ramirez, Daniel C., Ren, Renee, Burge, Alissa J., Potter, Hollis G., Su, Edwin, and Bauer, Thomas W.
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- 2023
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16. Ramp Lesions of the Medial Meniscus in Patients Undergoing Primary and Revision ACL Reconstruction: Prevalence and Risk Factors
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Balazs, George C, Greditzer, Harry G, Wang, Dean, Marom, Niv, Potter, Hollis G, Marx, Robert G, Rodeo, Scott A, and Williams, Riley J
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,ACL ,meniscus ,knee ,ramp lesion ,Human Movement and Sports Sciences ,Clinical sciences ,Sports science and exercise - Abstract
BackgroundRamp lesions are peripheral tears of the posterior horn of the medial meniscus that involve the meniscocapsular attachments or red-red zone and typically occur in conjunction with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) ruptures.PurposeTo identify the prevalence of, and risk factors for, ramp lesions in a large cohort of patients undergoing primary and revision ACL reconstruction.Study designCase series; Level of evidence, 4.MethodsWe queried our institutional registry of patients who underwent primary or revision surgical treatment for an ACL injury. Those who underwent preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at our facility were included in the study. Clinical details were extracted and verified using electronic records. All preoperative MRI scans were reviewed by a musculoskeletal radiologist for the presence of a ramp lesion. Stable ramp lesions were defined as a peripheral posterior horn medial meniscal tear identified on MRI but either not identifiable with viewing and probing from the anterior portals or, if identified, not displaceable with anteriorly directed probing. Unstable ramp lesions were defined as peripheral posterior horn medial meniscal tears at the meniscocapsular junction that were identifiable at the time of surgery and displaced into the medial compartment with probing. The prevalence of stable and unstable ramp lesions was calculated. Demographic, injury, and imaging parameters were determined using univariate statistics.ResultsA total of 372 patients were included. The overall prevalence of ramp lesions was 42% (155/372). Unstable ramp lesions were present in 73 (20%) patients, and stable ramp lesions were present in 82 (22%) patients. The presence of any ramp lesion (stable or unstable) was associated with bone marrow edema of the posteromedial tibia on MRI (odds ratio [OR], 3.0; P < .0001), a contact injury mechanism (OR, 1.8; P = .02), and a concurrent lateral meniscal tear (OR, 1.7; P = .02). No demographic, injury, surgical, or radiological variable was associated with a stable versus unstable ramp lesion.ConclusionThe overall prevalence of a ramp lesion in patients treated for ACL ruptures at our institution was 42%. The presence of bone marrow edema of the posteromedial tibia, a contact injury mechanism, or a lateral meniscal tear should alert surgeons to the potential presence of a medial meniscal ramp lesion.
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- 2019
17. Multiacquisition Variable-Resonance Image Combination Magnetic Resonance Imaging to Study Detailed Bone Apposition and Fixation of Cementless Knee System Compared to Cemented Total Knee Replacements
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Mosich, Gina M., Potter, Hollis G., Koff, Matthew F., Sacher, Sara E., Mishu, Mithun, and Westrich, Geoffrey H.
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- 2022
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18. Magnetic Resonance Imaging Synovial Classification Is Associated With Revision Indication and Polyethylene Insert Damage
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Landy, David C., Baral, Elexis C., Potter, Hollis G., Chiu, Yu-Fen, Sculco, Peter K., Sculco, Thomas P., Wright, Timothy M., and Koff, Matthew F.
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- 2022
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19. A Postmortem Analysis of Polyethylene Damage and Periprosthetic Tissue in Rotating Platform and Fixed Bearing Tibial Inserts
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Chen, James B., Baral, Elexis C., Hopper, Robert H., Jr., McDonald, James F., III, Koff, Matthew F., Potter, Hollis G., Bauer, Thomas W., Engh, Charles A., Jr., Wright, Timothy M., and Padgett, Douglas E.
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- 2022
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20. Semi-Inclusive $\pi_0$ target and beam-target asymmetries from 6 GeV electron scattering with CLAS
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Jawalkar, S., Koirala, S., Avakian, H., Bosted, P., Griffioen, K. A., Keith, C., Kuhn, S. E., Adhikari, K. P., Adhikari, S., Adikaram, D., Akbar, Z., Amaryan, M. J., Pereira, S. Anefalos, Ball, J., Baltzell, N. A., Battaglieri, M., Batourine, V., Bedlinskiy, I., Biselli, A. S., Boiarinov, S., Briscoe, W. J., Brock, J., Brooks, W. K., Bultmann, S., Burkert, V. D., Cao, Frank Thanh, Carlin, C., Carman, D. S., Celentano, A., Charles, G., Chetry, T., Ciullo, G., Clark, L., Colaneri, L., Cole, P. L., Contalbrigo, M., Cortes, O., Crede, V., D'Angelo, A., Dashyan, N., De Vita, R., De Sanctis, E., Defurne, M., Deur, A., Djalali, C., Ddoge, G., Dupre, R., Egiyan, H., Alaoui, A. El, Fassi, L. El, Elouadrhiri, L., Eugenio, P., Fedotov, G., Fegan, S., Fersch, R., Filippi, A., Fleming, J. A., Forest, T. A., Fradi, A., Garcon, M., Ghandilyan, Y., Gilfoyle, G. P., Giovanetti, K. L., Girod, F. X., Gleason, C., Gohn, W., Golovatch, E., Gothe, R. W., Guidal, M., Guler, N., Guo, L., Hakobyan, H., Hanretty, C., Harrison, N., Hattawy, M., Heddle, D., Hicks, K., Hollis, G., Holtrop, M., Hughes, S. M., Ilieva, Y., Ireland, D. G., Ishkhanov, B. S., Isupov, E. L., Jenkins, D., Jiang, H., Joo, K., Joosten, S., Keller, D., Khachatryan, G., Khachatryan, M., Khandaker, M., Kim, A., Kim, W., Klein, A., Klein, F. J., Kubarovsky, V., Kuleshov, S. V., Lanza, L., Lenisa, P., Livingston, K., Lu, H. Y., MacGregor, I . J . D., Markov, N., Mayer, M., McCracken, M. E., McKinnon, B., Meyer, C. A., Mineeva, T., Mirazita, M., Mokeev, V., Montgomery, R. A., Movsisyan, A, Camacho, C. Munoz, Nadel-Turonski, P., Net, L. A., Niccolai, S., Niculescu, G., Niculescu, I., Osipenko, M., Ostrovidov, A. I., Paremuzyan, R., Park, K., Pasyuk, E., Phelps, E., Phelps, W., Pierce, J., Pisano, S., Pogorelko, O., Price, J. W., Prok, Y., Protopopescu, D., Raue, B. A., Ripani, M., Riser, D., Rizzo, A., Rosner, G., Rossi, P., Sabatie, F., Salgado, C., Schumacher, R. A., Seder, E., Sharabian, Y. G., Simonyan, A., Skorodumina, Iu., Smith, G. D., Sober, D. I., Sokhan, D., Sparveris, N., Stankovic, I., Strauch, S., Taiuti, M., Ungaro, M., Voskanyan, H., Voutier, E., Walford, N. K., Watts, D. P., Wei, X., Weinstein, L. B., Wood, M. H., Zachariou, N., Zhang, J., and Zhao, Z. W.
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Nuclear Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We present precision measurements of the target and beam-target spin asymmetries from neutral pion electroproduction in deep-inelastic scattering (DIS) using the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) at Jefferson Lab. We scattered 6-GeV, longitudinally polarized electrons off longitudinally polarized protons in a cryogenic $^{14}$NH$_3$ target, and extracted double and single target spin asymmetries for $ep\rightarrow e^\prime\pi^0X$ in multidimensional bins in four-momentum transfer ($1.0
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- 2017
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21. Measurement of the helicity asymmetry $E$ in $\omega\to\pi^+\pi^-\pi^0$ photoproduction
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Akbar, Z., Roy, P., Park, S., Crede, V., Anisovich, A. V., Denisenko, I., Klempt, E., Nikonov, V. A., Sarantsev, A. V., Adhikari, K. P., Adhikari, S., Amaryan, M. J., Pereira, S. Anefalos, Avakian, H., Ball, J., Battaglieri, M., Batourine, V., Bedlinskiy, I., Boiarinov, S., Briscoe, W. J., Brock, J., Brooks, W. K., Burkert, V. D., Cao, F. T., Carlin, C., Carman, D. S., Celentano, A., Charles, G., Chetry, T., Ciullo, G., Clark, L., Cole, P. L., Contalbrigo, M., Cortes, O., D'Angelo, A., Dashyan, N., De Vita, R., De Sanctis, E., Deur, A., Djalali, C., Dugger, M., Dupre, R., Egiyan, H., Fassi, L. El, Eugenio, P., Fedotov, G., Fersch, R., Filippi, A., Fradi, A., Garcon, M., Gevorgyan, N., Giovanetti, K. L., Girod, F. X., Gleason, C., Gohn, W., Golovach, E., Gothe, R. W., Griffioen, K. A., Guidal, M., Guo, L., Hafidi, K., Hakobyan, H., Hanretty, C., Harrison, N., Hattawy, M., Heddle, D., Hicks, K., Hollis, G., Holtrop, M., Ireland, D. G., Ishkhanov, B. S., Isupov, E. L., Jenkins, D., Joosten, S., Keith, C. D., Keller, D., Khachatryan, G., Khachatryan, M., Khandaker, M., Kim, A., Kim, W., Klein, A., Klein, F. J., Kubarovsky, V., Lanza, L., Livingston, K., MacGregor, I. J. D., Markov, N., McKinnon, B., Meekins, D. G., Mineeva, T., Mokeev, V., Movsisyan, A., Camacho, C. Munoz, Nadel-Turonski, P., Niccolai, S., Osipenko, M., Ostrovidov, A. I., Paolone, M., Paremuzyan, R., Park, K., Pasyuk, E., Phelps, W., Pogorelko, O., Price, J. W., Prok, Y., Protopopescu, D., Raue, B. A., Ripani, M., Ritchie, B. G., Rizzo, A., Rosner, G., Sabatie, F., Salgado, C., Schumacher, R. A., Sharabian, Y. G., Skorodumina, Iu., Smith, G. D., Sober, D. I., Sokhan, D., Sparveris, N., Stepanyan, S., Strakovsky, I. I., Strauch, S., Taiuti, M., Ungaro, M., Voskanyan, H., Voutier, E., Wei, X., Wood, M. H., Zachariou, N., Zana, L., Zhang, J., and Zhao, Z. W.
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Nuclear Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The double-polarization observable $E$ was studied for the reaction $\gamma p\to p\omega$ using the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) in Hall B at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility and the longitudinally-polarized frozen-spin target (FROST). The observable was measured from the charged decay mode of the meson, $\omega\to\pi^+\pi^-\pi^0$, using a circularly-polarized tagged-photon beam with energies ranging from the $\omega$ threshold at 1.1 to 2.3 GeV. A partial-wave analysis within the Bonn-Gatchina framework found dominant contributions from the $3/2^+$ partial wave near threshold, which is identified with the sub-threshold $N(1720)\,3/2^+$ nucleon resonance. To describe the entire data set, which consisted of $\omega$ differential cross sections and a large variety of polarization observables, further contributions from other nucleon resonances were found to be necessary. With respect to non-resonant mechanisms, $\pi$ exchange in the $t$-channel was found to remain small across the analyzed energy range, while pomeron $t$-channel exchange gradually grew from the reaction threshold to dominate all other contributions above $W \approx 2$ GeV., Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures
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- 2017
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22. Photon beam asymmetry $\Sigma$ in the reaction $\vec{\gamma} p \to p \omega$ for $E_\gamma$ = 1.152 to 1.876 GeV
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CLAS Collaboration, Collins, P., Ritchie, B. G., Dugger, M., Klein, F. J., Anisovich, A. V., Klempt, E., Nikonov, V. A., Sarantsev, A., Adhikari, K. P., Adhikari, S., Adikaram, D., Akbar, Z., Pereira, S. Anefalos, Avakian, H., Ball, J., Baltzell, N. A., Bashkanov, M., Battaglieri, M., Batourine, V., Bedlinskiy, I., Biselli, A. S., Boiarinov, S., Briscoe, W. J., Brooks, W. K., Burkert, V. D., Cao, Frank Thanh, Cao, T., Carman, D. S., Celentano, A., Charles, G., Chetry, T., Ciullo, G., Clark, L., Cole, P. L., Contalbrigo, M., Cortes, O., Crede, V., Dashyan, N., De Vita, R., De Sanctis, E., Defurne, M., Deur, A., Djalali, C., Dupre, R., Egiyan, H., Alaoui, A. El, Fassi, L. El, Eugenio, P., Fedotov, G., Filippi, A., Fleming, J. A., Ghandilyan, Y., Gilfoyle, G. P., Giovanetti, K. L., Girod, F. X., Glazier, D. I., Gleason, C., Golovatch, E., Gothe, R. W., Griffioen, K. A., Guidal, M., Hafidi, K., Hakobyan, H., Hanretty, C., Harrison, N., Hattawy, M., Heddle, D., Hicks, K., Hollis, G., Holtrop, M., Hughes, S. M., Ilieva, Y., Ireland, D. G., Ishkhanov, B. S., Isupov, E. L., Jenkins, D., Jiang, H., Jo, H. S., Joosten, S., Keller, D., Khachatryan, G., Khachatryan, M., Khandaker, M., Kim, A., Kim, W., Klein, A., Kubarovsky, V., Kuleshov, S. V., Lanza, L., Lenisa, P., Livingston, K., MacGregor, I. J. D., Markov, N., McKinnon, B., Meyer, C. A., Meziani, Z. E., Mineeva, T., Mokeev, V., Montgomery, R. A., Movsisyan, A., Munevar, E., Camacho, C. Munoz, Nadel-Turonski, P., Net, L. A., Niccolai, S., Niculescu, G., Niculescu, I., Osipenko, M., Ostrovidov, A. I., Paolone, M., Paremuzyan, R., Park, K., Pasyuk, E., Phelps, W., Pisano, S., Pogorelko, O., Price, J. W., Procureur, S., Prok, Y., Protopopescu, D., Raue, B. A., Ripani, M., Rizzo, A., Rosner, G., Sabatie, F., Salgado, C., Schumacher, R. A., Sharabian, Y. G., Simonyan, A., Skorodumina, Iu., Smith, G. D., Sober, D. I., Sokhan, D., Sparveris, N., Stankovic, I., Stepanyan, S., Strakovsky, I. I., Strauch, S., Taiuti, M., Ungaro, M., Voskanyan, H., Voutier, E., Walford, N. K., Watts, D. P., Wei, X., Wood, M. H., Zachariou, N., Zhang, J., and Zhao, Z. W.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Photon beam asymmetry $\Sigma$ measurements for $\omega$ photoproduction in the reaction $\vec{\gamma} p \to \omega p$ are reported for photon energies from 1.152 to 1.876 GeV. Data were taken using a linearly-polarized tagged photon beam, a cryogenic hydrogen target, and the CLAS spectrometer in Hall B at Jefferson Lab. The measurements obtained markedly increase the size of the database for this observable, extend coverage to higher energies, and resolve discrepancies in previously published data. Comparisons of these new results with predictions from a chiral-quark-based model and from a dynamical coupled-channels model indicate the importance of interferences between $t$-channel meson exchange and $s$- and $u$-channel contributions, underscoring sensitivity to the nucleon resonances included in those descriptions. Comparisons with the Bonn-Gatchina partial-wave analysis indicate the $\Sigma$ data reported here help to fix the magnitudes of the interference terms between the leading amplitudes in that calculation (Pomeron exchange and the resonant portion of the $J^P=3/2^+$ partial wave), as well as the resonant portions of the smaller partial waves with $J^P$= $1/2^-$, $3/2^-$, and $5/2^+$., Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures
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- 2017
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23. Differential Cross Section Measurements for $\gamma n\to\pi^-p$ Above the First Nucleon Resonance Region
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Mattione, P. T., Carman, D. S., Strakovsky, I. I., Workman, R. L., Kudryavtsev, A. E., Svarc, A., Tarasov, V. E., Adhikari, K. P., Adhikari, S., Adikaram, D., Akbar, Z., Pereira, S. Anefalos, Ball, J., Baltzell, N. A., Bashkanov, M., Battaglieri, M., Batourine, V., Bedlinskiy, I., Biselli, A. S., Boiarinov, S., Briscoe, W. J., Burkert, V. D., Cao, T., Celentano, A., Charles, G., Chetry, T., Ciullo, G., Clark, L., Cole, P. L., Contalbrigo, M., Cortes, O., Crede, V., D'Angelo, A., Dashyan, N., De Vita, R., De Sanctis, E., Defurne, M., Deur, A., Djalali, C., Dugger, M., Dupre, R., Egiyan, H., Alaoui, A. El, Fassi, L. El, Eugenio, P., Fedotov, G., Fersch, R., Filippi, A., Fleming, J. A., Fradi, A., Ghandilyan, Y., Gilfoyle, G. P., Giovanetti, K. L., Girod, F. X., Gleason, C., Golovatch, E., Gothe, R. W., Griffioen, K. A., Guidal, M., Hafidi, K., Hakobyan, H., Hanretty, C., Harrison, N., Hattawy, M., Heddle, D., Hicks, K., Hollis, G., Holtrop, M., Hughes, S. M., Ilieva, Y., Ireland, D. G., Ishkhanov, B. S., Isupov, E. L., Jenkins, D., Jiang, H., Jo, H. S., Joo, K., Joosten, S., Keller, D., Khachatryan, G., Khachatryan, M., Khandaker, M., Kim, A., Kim, W., Klein, A., Klein, F. J., Kubarovsky, V., Kuleshov, S. V., Lanza, L., Lenisa, P., Livingston, K., MacGregor, I. J. D., Markov, N., McKinnon, B., Meyer, C. A., Meziani, Z. E., Mineeva, T., Mokeev, V., Montgomery, R. A., Movsisyan, A, Camacho, C. Munoz, Murdoch, G., Nadel-Turonski, P., Net, L. A., Niccolai, S., Niculescu, G., Niculescu, I., Osipenko, M., Ostrovidov, A. I., Paolone, M., Paremuzyan, R., Park, K., Pasyuk, E., Phelps, W., Pisano, S., Pogorelko, O., Price, J. W., Procureur, S., Prok, Y., Protopopescu, D., Raue, B. A., Ripani, M., Ritchie, B. G., Rizzo, A., Rosner, G., Sabatié, F., Salgado, C., Schumacher, R. A., Sharabian, Y. G., Simonyan, A., Skorodumina, Iu., Smith, G. D., Sokhan, D., Sparveris, N., Stankovic, I., Stepanyan, S., Strauch, S., Taiuti, M., Ungaro, M., Voskanyan, H., Voutier, E., Walford, N. K., Watts, D, Wei, X., Wood, M. H., Zachariou, N., Zhang, J., and Zhao, Z. W.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The quasi-free $\gamma d\to\pi^{-}p(p)$ differential cross section has been measured with CLAS at photon beam energies $E_\gamma$ from 0.445 GeV to 2.510 GeV (corresponding to $W$ from 1.311 GeV to 2.366 GeV) for pion center-of-mass angles $\cos\theta_\pi^{c.m.}$ from -0.72 to 0.92. A correction for final state interactions has been applied to this data to extract the $\gamma n\to\pi^-p$ differential cross sections. These cross sections are quoted in 8428 $(E_\gamma,\cos\theta_\pi^{c.m.})$ bins, a factor of nearly three increase in the world statistics for this channel in this kinematic range. These new data help to constrain coupled-channel analysis fits used to disentangle the spectrum of $N^*$ resonances and extract their properties. Selected photon decay amplitudes $N^* \to \gamma n$ at the resonance poles are determined for the first time and are reported here.
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- 2017
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24. Utility of Zero Echo Time MRI for the Diagnosis and Characterization of Ankle Fractures.
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Sahr, Meghan E., Breighner, Ryan E., Burge, Alissa J., Nwawka, Ogonna K., Konin, Gabrielle P., Helfet, David L., and Potter, Hollis G.
- Abstract
Background: Zero echo time (ZTE) imaging is a relatively new magnetic resonance (MR) pulse sequence that provides bone-soft tissue contrast similar to that of computed tomography (CT). Purpose: We sought to (1) determine the accuracy of ZTE MRI for the diagnosis of common ankle fractures and (2) investigate whether ZTE imaging sequences are equivalent to the gold standard of CT for the characterization of fracture fragments. Methods: We conducted a prospective case series of 54 patients with acute ankle trauma, in whom ZTE MRI was performed, followed by surgical reduction. Fractures on the ZTE sequence were correlated with the operative report as the reference standard. Raw agreement (%) and correlation (κ) were calculated. Selected fracture fragments were measured in 2 dimensions (anterior-posterior and superior-inferior) on corresponding sagittal ZTE and CT images by 3 independent radiologists to determine reliability. Results: The ZTE sequence demonstrated 47 distal fibular, 17 medial malleolar, 24 posterior malleolar, 5 anterior talofibular ligament avulsion, and 4 distal tibial fractures on the 54 cases. Raw agreement with operative findings was 95% (range: 86%-100%) and correlation almost perfect (0.960 [0.926-0.995]). Fragment characterization was accurate and repeatable. Intraobserver and interobserver agreement was excellent. Conclusions: Our case series suggests that the use of the MRI ZTE sequence may provide images with CT-like contrast for characterizing acute ankle fractures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. MRI‐based radiomic analysis of soft tissue reactions near total hip arthroplasty.
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Koch, Kevin M., Potter, Hollis G., and Koff, Matthew F.
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TOTAL hip replacement , *RADIOMICS , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *TISSUE analysis , *JOINT infections , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
This study applied radiomics to MRI data for automated classification of soft tissue abnormalities near total hip arthroplasty (THA). A total of 126 subjects with 1.5 T MRI of symptomatic THA were included in the analysis. Peri‐prosthetic soft tissue regions of interest were manually segmented and classified by an expert radiologist. An established radiomics library was used to extract 96 features from 2D image patches across segmented regions. Logistic regression was employed as the primary radiomic classifier, achieving an average area under curve (AUC) of 0.71 in differentiating tissue classifications spanning normal, infected, and several inflammatory, noninfectious categories. Notably, infection cases were identified with the highest accuracy, attaining an AUC of 0.79. Statement of Clinical Significance: This study demonstrates that radiomics applied to MRI data can effectively automate the classification of soft tissue abnormalities in symptomatic total hip arthroplasty, particularly in differentiating periprosthetic infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Chondral Injury Associated With ACL Injury: Assessing Progressive Chondral Degeneration With Morphologic and Quantitative MRI Techniques.
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Davidson, Emily J., Figgie, Caroline, Nguyen, Joseph, Pedoia, Valentina, Majumdar, Sharmila, Potter, Hollis G., and Koff, Matthew F.
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ANTERIOR cruciate ligament injuries ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,OSTEOARTHRITIS ,KNEE ,CARTILAGE - Abstract
Background: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries are associated with a risk of post-traumatic osteoarthritis due to chondral damage. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques provide excellent visualization and assessment of cartilage and can detect subtle and early chondral damage. This is often preceding clinical and radiographic post-traumatic osteoarthritis. Hypothesis: Morphologic and quantitative MRI techniques can assess early and progressive degenerative chondral changes after acute ACL injury. Study Design: Prospective longitudinal cohort. Level of Evidence: Level 3. Methods: Sixty-five participants with acute unilateral ACL injuries underwent bilateral knee MRI scans within 1 month of injury. Fifty-seven participants presented at 6 months, while 54 were evaluated at 12 months. MRI morphologic evaluation using a modified Noyes score assessed cartilage signal alteration, chondral damage, and subchondral bone status. Quantitative T1ρ and T2 mapping at standardized anatomic locations in both knees was assessed. Participant-reported outcomes at follow-up time points were recorded. Results: Baseline Noyes scores of MRI detectable cartilage damage were highest in the injured knee lateral tibial plateau (mean 2.5, standard error (SE) 0.20, P < 0.01), followed by lateral femoral condyle (mean 2.1, SE 0.18, P < 0.01), which progressed after 1 year. Longitudinal prolongation at 12 months in the injured knees was significant for T1ρ affecting the medial and lateral femoral condyles (P < 0.01) and trochlea (P < 0.01), whereas T2 values were prolonged for medial and lateral femoral condyles (P < 0.01) and trochlea (P < 0.01). The contralateral noninjured knees also demonstrated T1ρ and T2 prolongation in the medial and lateral compartment chondral subdivisions. Progressive chondral damage occurred despite improved patient-reported outcomes. Conclusion: After ACL injury, initial and sustained chondral damage predominantly affects the lateral tibiofemoral compartment, but longitudinal chondral degeneration also occurred in other compartments of the injured and contralateral knee. Clinical Relevance: Early identification of chondral degeneration post-ACL injury using morphological and quantitative MRI techniques could enable interventions to be implemented early to prevent or delay PTOA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. MR Imaging in Patients with Ulnar Collateral Ligament Injury
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Tiegs-Heiden, Christin A., Murthy, Naveen S., Lurie, Brett, Fritz, Jan, Potter, Hollis G., Dines, Joshua S., editor, Camp, Christopher L., editor, and Altchek, David W., editor
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- 2021
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28. Beyond the AJR: MRI-Based CT Analysis of Spondyloarthropathy
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Potter, Hollis G., primary
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- 2024
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29. Target and beam-target spin asymmetries in exclusive pion electroproduction for $Q^2>1$ GeV$^2$. II. $e p \rightarrow e \pi^0 p$
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Bosted, P. E., Kim, A., Adhikari, K. P., Adikaram, D., Akbar, Z., Amaryan, M. J., Pereira, S. Anefalos, Avakian, H., Badui, R. A., Ball, J., Balossino, I., Battaglieri, M., Bedlinskiy, I., Biselli, A. S., Boiarinov, S., Briscoe, W. J., Brooks, W. K., Bültmann, S., Burkert, V. D., Cao, T., Carman, D. S., Celentano, A., Chandavar, S., Charles, G., Chetry, T., Ciullo, G., Clark, L., Colaneri, L., Cole, P. L., Contalbrigo, M., Cortes, O., Crede, V., D'Angelo, A., Dashyan, N., De Vita, R., De Sanctis, E., Deur, A., Djalali, C., Dupre, R., Egiyan, H., Alaoui, A. El, Fassi, L. El, Elouadrhiri, L., Eugenio, P., Fanchini, E., Fedotov, G., Fegan, S., Fersch, R., Filippi, A., Fleming, J. A., Forest, T. A., Fradi, A., Ghandilyan, Y., Gilfoyle, G. P., Girod, F. X., Glazier, D. I., Gohn, W., Golovatch, E., Gothe, R. W., Griffioen, K. A., Guidal, M., Guler, N., Hakobyan, H., Guo, L., Hafidi, K., Hanretty, C., Harrison, N., Hattawy, M., Heddle, D., Hicks, K., Hollis, G., Holtrop, M., Hughes, S. M., Ireland, D. G., Isupov, E. L., Jenkins, D., Jiang, H., Jo, H. S., Joo, K., Keller, D., Khachatryan, G., Khandaker, M., Kim, W., Klei, A., Klein, F. J., Koirala, S., Kubarovsky, V., Kuhn, S. E., Lanza, L., Lenisa, P., Livingston, K., Lu, H. Y., MacGregor, I. J. D., Markov, N., Mayer, M., McCracken, M. E., McKinnon, B., Mineeva, T., Mirazita, M., Mokeev, V. I., Montgomery, R. A., Movsisyan, A, Camacho, C. Munoz, Murdoch, G., Nadel-Turonski, P., Ni, A., Niccolai, S., Niculescu, G., Osipenko, M., Ostrovidov, A. I., Paolone, M., Paremuzyan, R., Park, K., Pasyuk, E., Phelps, W., Pisano, S., Pogorelko, O., Price, J. W., Prok, Y., Protopopescu, D., Puckett, A. J. R., Raue, B. A., Ripani, M., Rizzo, A., Rosner, G., Rossi, P., Roy, P., Sabatié, F., Saini, M. S., Schumacher, R. A., Seder, E., Sharabian, Y. G., Skorodumina, Iu., Smith, G. D., Sokhan, D., Sparveris, N., Stankovic, I., Stepanyan, S., Stoler, P., Strakovsky, I. I., Strauch, S., Taiuti, M., Tian, Ye, Torayev, B., Ungaro, M., Voskanyan, H., Voutier, E., Walford, N. K., Watts, D. P., Wei, X., Weinstein, L. B., Zachariou, N., Zhang, J., Zhao, Z. W., and Zonta, I.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Beam-target double-spin asymmetries and target single-spin asymmetries were measured for the exclusive $\pi^0$ electroproduction reaction $\gamma^* p \to p \pi^0$, expanding an analysis of the $\gamma^* p \to n \pi^+$ reaction from the same experiment. The results were obtained from scattering of 6 GeV longitudinally polarized electrons off longitudinally polarized protons using the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer at Jefferson Lab. The kinematic range covered is $1.1
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- 2016
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30. Genicular Artery Embolization for Refractory Hemarthrosis following Total Knee Arthroplasty: Technique, Safety, Efficacy, and Patient-Reported Outcomes
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Cornman-Homonoff, Joshua, Kishore, Sirish A., Waddell, Bradford S., Kesler, Jacqueline, Mandl, Lisa A., Westrich, Geoffrey H., Potter, Hollis G., and Trost, David W.
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- 2021
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31. Improved nerve conspicuity with water-weighting and denoising in two-point Dixon magnetic resonance neurography
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Tan, Ek T., Queler, Sophie C., Lin, Bin, Endo, Yoshimi, Burge, Alissa J., Sternberg, Julia, Potter, Hollis G., and Sneag, Darryl B.
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- 2021
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32. Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Knee
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Argentieri, Erin C., primary, Zochowski, Kelly C., additional, Braun, Tatum W., additional, Burge, Alissa J., additional, and Potter, Hollis G., additional
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- 2022
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33. List of Contributors
- Author
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Abat, Ferran, primary, Arakgi, Michelle E., additional, Arendt, Elizabeth A., additional, Argentieri, Erin C., additional, Bartels, Douglas W., additional, Baumann, Charles A., additional, Beletsky, Alexander, additional, Bhatia, Sanjeev, additional, Braun, Tatum W., additional, Brown, Charles H., additional, Burge, Alissa J., additional, Burnett, Robert A., additional, Cancienne, Jourdan M., additional, Chahla, Jorge, additional, Chilelli, Brian, additional, Christino, Melissa A., additional, Cole, Brian J., additional, Cosgarea, Andrew J., additional, Cotter, Eric J., additional, Cregar, William M., additional, Damasena, Iswadi, additional, Dean, Robert S., additional, DeJour, David, additional, Delaloye, Jean Romain, additional, DePhillipo, Nicholas N., additional, Diermeier, Theresa, additional, DiFelice, Gregory S., additional, Ellman, Michael B., additional, Ence, Andrew K., additional, Engebretsen, Lars, additional, Farr, Jack, additional, Franck, Florent, additional, Frank, Rachel M., additional, Fritsch, Brett A., additional, Fu, Freddie H., additional, Fulkerson, John P., additional, Graden, Nathan R., additional, Geeslin, Andrew G., additional, Gelber, Pablo Eduardo, additional, Getgood, Alan, additional, Gilat, Ron, additional, Giordanelli, Matthew D., additional, Gomoll, Andreas, additional, Görtz, Simon, additional, Hinckel, Betina B., additional, Huddleston, Hailey P., additional, Kahat, David H., additional, Kane, Patrick, additional, Kennedy, Nicholas I., additional, Kocher, Mininder S., additional, Kunze, Kyle N., additional, Krych, Aaron J., additional, LaGreca, Jaren, additional, LaPrade, Robert F., additional, Lattermann, Christian, additional, LeBus, George, additional, Levy, Bruce A., additional, Lind, Martin, additional, Linklater, James P., additional, Loeb, Alexander E., additional, Macalena, Jeffrey A., additional, Mandelbaum, Bert, additional, Martin, R. Kyle, additional, Meredith, Sean J., additional, Mitchell, Justin J., additional, Moatshe, Gilbert, additional, Monibi, Farrah A., additional, Mueller, Brett, additional, Musahl, Volker, additional, Muzzi, Stefano, additional, O’Brien, Luke T., additional, Perkins, Crystal A., additional, Pioger, Charles, additional, Potter, Hollis G., additional, Pujol, Nicolas, additional, Putnis, Sven E., additional, Raynor, Martin Brett, additional, Rodeo, Scott A., additional, Saithna, Adnan, additional, Scheidt, Michael, additional, Scholz, Henry D., additional, Siljander, Breana, additional, Slone, Harris S., additional, Smigielski, Robert, additional, Sonnery-Cottet, Bertrand, additional, Spalding, Tim, additional, Strauss, Marc, additional, Tabbaa, Suzanne M., additional, Tagliero, Adam J., additional, Tanaka, Miho J., additional, Tauro, Tracy, additional, Teitge, Robert A., additional, Torres-Claramunt, Raúl, additional, van der List, Jelle P., additional, Verdonk, Peter, additional, Vermeijden, Harmen D., additional, Vieira, Thais Dutra, additional, Williams, Brady T., additional, Willimon, S. Clifton, additional, Wise, Kelsey L., additional, Xerogeanes, John W., additional, Yanke, Adam B., additional, and Zochowski, Kelly C., additional
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- 2022
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34. Stretchable self-tuning MRI receive coils based on liquid metal technology (LiquiTune)
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Elizaveta Motovilova, Ek Tsoon Tan, Victor Taracila, Jana M. Vincent, Thomas Grafendorfer, James Shin, Hollis G. Potter, Fraser J. L. Robb, Darryl B. Sneag, and Simone A. Winkler
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Magnetic resonance imaging systems rely on signal detection via radiofrequency coil arrays which, ideally, need to provide both bendability and form-fitting stretchability to conform to the imaging volume. However, most commercial coils are rigid and of fixed size with a substantial mean offset distance of the coil from the anatomy, which compromises the spatial resolution and diagnostic image quality as well as patient comfort. Here, we propose a soft and stretchable receive coil concept based on liquid metal and ultra-stretchable polymer that conforms closely to a desired anatomy. Moreover, its smart geometry provides a self-tuning mechanism to maintain a stable resonance frequency over a wide range of elongation levels. Theoretical analysis and numerical simulations were experimentally confirmed and demonstrated that the proposed coil withstood the unwanted frequency detuning typically observed with other stretchable coils (0.4% for the proposed coil as compared to 4% for a comparable control coil). Moreover, the signal-to-noise ratio of the proposed coil increased by more than 60% as compared to a typical, rigid, commercial coil.
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- 2021
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35. Taboo language across the globe: A multi-lab study
- Author
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Sulpizio, S., Günther, F, Badan, L, Basclain, B, Brysbaert, M, Chan, Y.L., Ciaccio, L.A., Dudschig, C, Duñabeitia, J.A., Fasoli, F, Ferrand, L., Filipović Đurđević, Dušica, Guerra, E, Hollis, G, Job, R, Jornkokgoud, K, Kahraman, H, Kgolo-Lotshwao, N, Kinoshita, S, Kos, J, Lee, L, Lee, N, Mackenzie, I.G., Manojlović, Milica, Manouilidou, C, Martinić, M, del Carmen Méndez, M, Mišić, Ksenija, Na Chiangmai, N, Nikolaev, A, Oganyan, M, Rusconi, P, Samo, G, Chi-shing, T, Westbury, C, Wongupparaj, P, Yap, M, Marelli, M, Sulpizio, S., Günther, F, Badan, L, Basclain, B, Brysbaert, M, Chan, Y.L., Ciaccio, L.A., Dudschig, C, Duñabeitia, J.A., Fasoli, F, Ferrand, L., Filipović Đurđević, Dušica, Guerra, E, Hollis, G, Job, R, Jornkokgoud, K, Kahraman, H, Kgolo-Lotshwao, N, Kinoshita, S, Kos, J, Lee, L, Lee, N, Mackenzie, I.G., Manojlović, Milica, Manouilidou, C, Martinić, M, del Carmen Méndez, M, Mišić, Ksenija, Na Chiangmai, N, Nikolaev, A, Oganyan, M, Rusconi, P, Samo, G, Chi-shing, T, Westbury, C, Wongupparaj, P, Yap, M, and Marelli, M
- Abstract
The use of taboo words represents one of the most common and arguably universal linguistic behaviors, fulfilling a wide range of psychological and social functions. However, in the scientific literature, taboo language is poorly characterized, and how it is realized in different languages and populations remains largely unexplored. Here we provide a database of taboo words, collected from different linguistic communities (Study 1, N = 1046), along with their speaker-centered semantic characterization (Study 2, N = 455 for each of six rating dimensions), covering 13 languages and 17 countries from all five permanently inhabited continents. Our results show that, in all languages, taboo words are mainly characterized by extremely low valence and high arousal, and very low written frequency. However, a significant amount of cross-country variability in words’ tabooness and offensiveness proves the importance of community-specific sociocultural knowledge in the study of taboo language.
- Published
- 2024
36. Multiacquisition Variable-Resonance Image Combination Magnetic Resonance Imaging Used to Study Detailed Bone Apposition and Fixation of an Additively Manufactured Cementless Acetabular Shell
- Author
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Alamanda, Vignesh K., De Martino, Ivan, Potter, Hollis G., Koff, Matthew F., Lin, Bin, Muskat, Ahava, and Westrich, Geoffrey H.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Multiacquisition Variable-Resonance Image Combination Magnetic Resonance Imaging Used to Study Detailed Bone Apposition and Fixation of an Additively Manufactured Cementless Acetabular Shell
- Author
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Vignesh K. Alamanda, MD, Ivan Demartino, MD, Hollis G. Potter, MD, Matthew F. Koff, PhD, Bin Lin, MS, Ahava Muskat, BA, and Geoffrey H. Westrich, MD
- Subjects
MRI ,Total hip replacement ,Bone fixation ,Additively manufactured ,Acetabular shell ,Bone integration ,Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 - Abstract
Background: The ability to utilize magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to assess bony fixation in 3 dimensions may allow a better understanding of the implant design and bony integration. We hypothesized that a new 3-dimensionally printed cementless highly porous acetabular component (Stryker Trident II TritaniumTM) would show better fixation than an earlier cup from the same manufacturer as assessed by the noninvasive technique of multispectral MRI. Methods: Multiacquisition variable-resonance image combination selective metal suppression MRI was performed in 19 patients implanted with a new 3-dimensionally printed cup and 20 patients who had received a previous-generation cup from the same manufacturer at 1-year follow-up. Each cup was graded globally as well as by 9 specific zones. Integration grades were performed for each zone: 0, full bone integration; 1, fibrous membrane present; 2, osteolysis; and 3, fluid present. A mixed-effects logistic regression model was used to compare fixation between the 2 groups. Results: All cups in both cohorts showed greater than 90% estimated global bony integration (3-dimensionally printed cups, 99.4%; regular cups 91.6%) with no osteolysis or fluid observed in any cup. The 3-dimensionally printed cup had 1 of 171 zones (0.6%) graded as fibrous membrane present, while the 2-dimensional group had 15 of 180 zones (8.3%) graded as fibrous. Of note, screw hole regions were omitted but may be read as fibrous membrane areas. Conclusion: Using multiacquisition variable-resonance image combination selective MRI, our analysis showed greater osteointegration and less fibrous membrane formation in the 3-dimensionally printed cups than the control group at 1-year follow-up.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Utility of Isotropic 3D Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Assessing Painful Total Ankle Replacements
- Author
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Ji Lin MD, Carolyn M. Sofka MD, Constantine A. Demetracopoulos MD, and Hollis G. Potter MD
- Subjects
Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. How Useful Is Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Evaluating Adverse Local Tissue Reaction?
- Author
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Padgett, Douglas E., Su, Edwin P., Wright, Timothy M., Burge, Alissa J., and Potter, Hollis G.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The CLAS12 Forward Time-of-Flight system
- Author
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Carman, D.S., Clark, L., De Vita, R., Fedotov, G., Gothe, R.W., Hollis, G., Miller, B., Phelps, E., Tian, Y., Trivedi, A., and Wiggins, C.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Imaging of Failed Cartilage Repair
- Author
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Burge, Alissa J. and Potter, Hollis G.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Understanding the undulating pattern of the distal femoral growth plate: Implications for surgical procedures involving the pediatric knee: A descriptive MRI study
- Author
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Ladenhauf, Hannah N., Jones, Kristofer J., Potter, Hollis G., Nguyen, Joseph T., and Green, Daniel W.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Pre-operative Static Anterior Tibial Translation Assessed on MRI Does Not Influence Return to Sport or Satisfaction After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction
- Author
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Marom, Niv, Kleeblad, Laura J., Ling, Daphne, Nwachukwu, Benedict U., Marx, Robert G., Potter, Hollis G., and Pearle, Andrew D.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Assessment of a deep-learning system for fracture detection in musculoskeletal radiographs
- Author
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Rebecca M. Jones, Anuj Sharma, Robert Hotchkiss, John W. Sperling, Jackson Hamburger, Christian Ledig, Robert O’Toole, Michael Gardner, Srivas Venkatesh, Matthew M. Roberts, Romain Sauvestre, Max Shatkhin, Anant Gupta, Sumit Chopra, Manickam Kumaravel, Aaron Daluiski, Will Plogger, Jason Nascone, Hollis G. Potter, and Robert V. Lindsey
- Subjects
Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Missed fractures are the most common diagnostic error in emergency departments and can lead to treatment delays and long-term disability. Here we show through a multi-site study that a deep-learning system can accurately identify fractures throughout the adult musculoskeletal system. This approach may have the potential to reduce future diagnostic errors in radiograph interpretation.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Non-treatment of stable ramp lesions does not degrade clinical outcomes in the setting of primary ACL reconstruction
- Author
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Balazs, George C., Greditzer, IV, Harry G., Wang, Dean, Marom, Niv, Potter, Hollis G., Rodeo, Scott A., Marx, Robert G., and Williams, III, Riley J.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Reverse total shoulder arthroplasty: an imaging overview
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Lee, Dong Hyun, Choi, Yun Sun, Potter, Hollis G., Endo, Yoshimi, Sivakumaran, Thiru, Lim, Tae Kang, and Chun, Tong Jin
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Lost Battalion
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Hollis G. Allen
- Published
- 2020
48. Imaging of the Clavicle
- Author
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Greditzer, Harry G., IV, Hutchinson, Ian D., Potter, Hollis G., and Groh, Gordon I., editor
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Significantly Worse Fixation of Cemented Patellar Components on Multiacquisition Variable-Resonance Image Combination Magnetic Resonance Imaging Compared to Femoral and Tibial Components: A Cause for Concern?
- Author
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Eytan M. Debbi, David J. Mayman, Nicolas Sapountzis, Joseph Hawes, Agnes D. Cororaton, Hollis G. Potter, Steven B. Haas, and Brian P. Chalmers
- Subjects
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine - Published
- 2023
50. MR imaging of the shoulder in youth baseball players: Anatomy, pathophysiology, and treatment
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Aoyama, Julien T., Maier, Pia, Servaes, Sabah, Serai, Suraj D., Ganley, Theodore J., Potter, Hollis G., and Nguyen, Jie C.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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