16 results on '"Otjen J"'
Search Results
2. Systemic lupus erythematosus: An imitator for inflammatory bowel disease.
- Author
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Reznikov EA, Person H, Davis E, Zhao Y, Otjen J, Ambartsumyan L, Len M, and Scarlett JM
- Abstract
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a systemic autoimmune disease that may involve any organ in the body. Inflammation of the bowel wall as a presenting symptom of SLE is uncommon and can lead to delays in diagnosis and treatment. Here, we discuss the case of an adolescent male who presented with weight loss, intermittent fevers, abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhea. Initially, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) was suspected, but endoscopic evaluation did not support this diagnosis. A computed tomography scan of the abdomen revealed signs of serositis, concerning for an inflammatory process and the patient was referred to Rheumatology for further evaluation. Autoimmune serologies were obtained and combined with clinical findings confirmed a diagnosis of SLE. This case advances our understanding of SLE as a multisystemic disease and highlights an unusual presentation involving the gastrointestinal tract, which can mimic IBD and potentially delay the diagnosis and treatment process., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (© 2024 The Author(s). JPGN Reports published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition and the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition.)
- Published
- 2024
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3. Near-pair patch generative adversarial network for data augmentation of focal pathology object detection models.
- Author
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Tu E, Burkow J, Tsai A, Junewick J, Perez FA, Otjen J, and Alessio AM
- Abstract
Purpose: The limited volume of medical training data remains one of the leading challenges for machine learning for diagnostic applications. Object detectors that identify and localize pathologies require training with a large volume of labeled images, which are often expensive and time-consuming to curate. To reduce this challenge, we present a method to support distant supervision of object detectors through generation of synthetic pathology-present labeled images., Approach: Our method employs the previously proposed cyclic generative adversarial network (cycleGAN) with two key innovations: (1) use of "near-pair" pathology-present regions and pathology-absent regions from similar locations in the same subject for training and (2) the addition of a realism metric (Fréchet inception distance) to the generator loss term. We trained and tested this method with 2800 fracture-present and 2800 fracture-absent image patches from 704 unique pediatric chest radiographs. The trained model was then used to generate synthetic pathology-present images with exact knowledge of location (labels) of the pathology. These synthetic images provided an augmented training set for an object detector., Results: In an observer study, four pediatric radiologists used a five-point Likert scale indicating the likelihood of a real fracture (1 = definitely not a fracture and 5 = definitely a fracture) to grade a set of real fracture-absent, real fracture-present, and synthetic fracture-present images. The real fracture-absent images scored 1.7 ± 1.0 , real fracture-present images 4.1 ± 1.2 , and synthetic fracture-present images 2.5 ± 1.2 . An object detector model (YOLOv5) trained on a mix of 500 real and 500 synthetic radiographs performed with a recall of 0.57 ± 0.05 and an F 2 score of 0.59 ± 0.05 . In comparison, when trained on only 500 real radiographs, the recall and F 2 score were 0.49 ± 0.06 and 0.53 ± 0.06 , respectively., Conclusions: Our proposed method generates visually realistic pathology and that provided improved object detector performance for the task of rib fracture detection., (© 2024 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE).)
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- 2024
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4. High sensitivity methods for automated rib fracture detection in pediatric radiographs.
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Burkow J, Holste G, Otjen J, Perez F, Junewick J, Zbojniewicz A, Romberg E, Menashe S, Frost J, and Alessio A
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Child, Preschool, Radiography, Neural Networks, Computer, Radiologists, Retrospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Rib Fractures diagnostic imaging, Rib Fractures etiology, Radiology
- Abstract
Rib fractures are highly predictive of non-accidental trauma in children under 3 years old. Rib fracture detection in pediatric radiographs is challenging because fractures can be obliquely oriented to the imaging detector, obfuscated by other structures, incomplete, and non-displaced. Prior studies have shown up to two-thirds of rib fractures may be missed during initial interpretation. In this paper, we implemented methods for improving the sensitivity (i.e. recall) performance for detecting and localizing rib fractures in pediatric chest radiographs to help augment performance of radiology interpretation. These methods adapted two convolutional neural network (CNN) architectures, RetinaNet and YOLOv5, and our previously proposed decision scheme, "avalanche decision", that dynamically reduces the acceptance threshold for proposed regions in each image. Additionally, we present contributions of using multiple image pre-processing and model ensembling techniques. Using a custom dataset of 1109 pediatric chest radiographs manually labeled by seven pediatric radiologists, we performed 10-fold cross-validation and reported detection performance using several metrics, including F2 score which summarizes precision and recall for high-sensitivity tasks. Our best performing model used three ensembled YOLOv5 models with varied input processing and an avalanche decision scheme, achieving an F2 score of 0.725 ± 0.012. Expert inter-reader performance yielded an F2 score of 0.732. Results demonstrate that our combination of sensitivity-driving methods provides object detector performance approaching the capabilities of expert human readers, suggesting that these methods may provide a viable approach to identify all rib fractures., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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5. Extra-axial haemorrhages in young children with skull fractures: abuse or accident?
- Author
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Wallace J, Metz JB, Otjen J, Perez FA, Done S, Brown ECB, Wiester RT, Boos SC, Ganti S, and Feldman KW
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- Accidents, Child, Child, Preschool, Hematoma, Subdural, Humans, Infant, Retrospective Studies, Child Abuse diagnosis, Skull Fractures complications, Skull Fractures diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Objective: Infant and toddler subdural haemorrhages (SDH) are often considered indicative of abuse or major trauma. However, accidental impact events, such as falls, cause contact extra-axial haemorrhages (EAHs). The current study sought to determine frequency and clinical behaviour of EAHs with infant and toddler accidental and abusive skull fractures., Patients and Methods: Children aged <4 years with accidental skull fractures and abusive fractures identified by CT at two paediatric tertiary care centres. Clinical data were abstracted by child abuse paediatricians and images were reviewed by paediatric radiologists. Data were analysed using univariate and multivariate logistic regression as well as descriptive statistics., Results: Among 227 subjects, 86 (37.9%) had EAHs. EAH was present in 73 (34.8%) accidental and 13 (76.5%) of the abusive injuries. Intracranial haemorrhage rates were not different for children with major or minor accidents but were fewer than abused. EAH was equally common with falls <4 and > 4 ft. EAH depths did not differ by mechanism, but 69% of accidental EAHs were localised solely at fracture sites vs 38% abuse. Widespread and multifocal EAHs were more common with abuse. Children with abuse or major accidental injuries presented with lower initial Glasgow Coma Scales than those with minor accidents. Abused children had initial loss of consciousness more often than those with either minor or major accidents., Conclusions: Simple contact EAHs were common among children with minor and major accidental skull fractures. Accidental EAHs were more localised with less neurological dysfunction than abusive., Competing Interests: Competing interests: JBM, JO, SD, ECBB, RTW, SCB and KWF have provided medical legal consultation and testimony., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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6. Foot and Ankle Musculoskeletal Imaging of Pediatric Patients With Cerebral Palsy.
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Otjen J, Menashe SJ, Maloney E, Iyer RS, Ngo AV, Sousa TC, and Thapa M
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Cerebral Palsy complications, Foot Deformities diagnostic imaging, Foot Deformities etiology
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE. Any combination of abnormal positioning of the ankle, hindfoot, midfoot, and forefoot is possible in the context of cerebral palsy, but some patterns are more common than others. The purpose of this article is to discuss the radiographic manifestations and surgical management of the following common conditions: equinus, equinoplanovalgus, equinocavovarus, vertical talus, oblique talus, hallux valgus, and ankle valgus. CONCLUSION. CP is defined by abnormalities of the developing fetal or infant brain that result in permanent central motor dysfunction. Foot and ankle deformities are very common in the patients with CP, occurring in up to 93% of such patients as a result of underlying abnormal muscle tone, impaired motor control, and dynamic muscle imbalance. Radiologists must develop knowledge of the most common changes in alignment and basic techniques for correction to better recognize abnormalities and improve communication with orthopedic colleagues.
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- 2020
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7. Comparison of Micro-Computed Tomography and Clinical Computed Tomography Protocols for Visualization of Nasal Cartilage Before Surgical Planning for Rhinoplasty.
- Author
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Saxena RC, Friedman S, Bly RA, Otjen J, Alessio AM, Li Y, Hannaford B, Whipple M, and Moe KS
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- Cadaver, Feasibility Studies, Humans, Nasal Cartilages pathology, Nasal Cartilages diagnostic imaging, Rhinoplasty, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, X-Ray Microtomography methods
- Abstract
Importance: There is no imaging standard to model nasal cartilage for the planning of rhinoplasty procedures. Preoperative visualization of cartilage may improve objective evaluation of nasal deformities, surgical planning, and surgical reconstruction., Objectives: To evaluate the feasibility of visualizing nasal cartilage using high resolution micro-computed tomography (CT) compared with the criterion standard of pathologic findings in a cadaveric specimen and to evaluate its accuracy compared with various clinical CT protocols., Design, Setting, and Participants: Anatomic study at the University of Washington using single human cadaveric nasal specimens performed from July 10, 2017, to March 30, 2018., Interventions: A micro-CT acquisition with 60-micron resolution was obtained of a nasal specimen. The specimen was then scanned with 5 different clinical CT protocols to span both clinical care and machine limits. The specimen was then sectioned in 5-mm axial slices for pathologic analysis., Main Outcomes and Measures: Micro-CT images were registered to pathologic specimen cross-sections using a graphite fiducial system. Cartilage substructures were manually segmented and analyzed. A library of matched images across the micro-CT and various clinical CT protocols was then developed. Region of interest analysis was performed for each of the cartilage structures and their boundaries on clinical CT protocols and micro-CT, with the outcome of mean (SD) density using Hounsfield units., Results: A single human cadaveric nasal specimen was used to obtain the following results. Lower lateral cartilage, upper lateral cartilage, and septal cartilage were accurately delineated on the micro-CT images compared with pathologic findings. The mean absolute deviation from pathologic findings was 0.30 mm for septal cartilage thickness, 0.98 mm for maximal upper lateral cartilage length, and 1.40 mm for maximal lower lateral cartilage length. On clinical CT protocols, only septal cartilage was well discriminated from boundary. Higher radiation dose resulted in more accurate density measurements of cartilage, but it did not ultimately improve ability to discriminate cartilage., Conclusions and Relevance: The results of this anatomic study may represent a notable step toward advancing knowledge of the capabilities and pitfalls of nasal cartilage visualization on CT. Nasal cartilage visualization was feasible on the micro-CT compared with pathologic findings. Future research may further examine the barriers to accurately visualizing upper lateral cartilage and lower lateral cartilage, a prerequisite for clinical application., Level of Evidence: NA.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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8. Simulation-Guided Tracheotomy in a Patient With Fibrodysplasia Ossificans Progressiva.
- Author
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Padia R, Miller C, Patak L, Friedman SD, Stone K, Otjen J, and Johnson K
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Humans, Computer Simulation, Myositis Ossificans surgery, Printing, Three-Dimensional, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Tracheotomy methods
- Abstract
Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP) is a rare disorder that causes heterotopic bone formation leading to chest wall and spinal deformities. This case describes an 11-year-old female with FOP who presented in respiratory failure necessitating two emergent fiberoptic nasotracheal intubations. The patient had severe trismus, rotary flexion of the neck, and distortion of the airway. A three-dimensional printed model based off of a computed tomography reconstruction was created for an in situ simulation before the true procedure. The surgery and trach change were both uneventful. We propose that with careful preoperative planning, tracheotomy can be an appropriate option for FOP patients. Laryngoscope, 129:812-817, 2019., (© 2018 The American Laryngological, Rhinological and Otological Society, Inc.)
- Published
- 2019
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9. Cardiac Ventricular Laceration Due to Child Abuse: Abusive Ventricular Laceration.
- Author
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Yarid N, Brown EC, Boos M, Otjen J, Metz J, Jenny C, and Feldman KW
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- Child, Preschool, Fatal Outcome, Heart Ventricles pathology, Humans, Lacerations pathology, Male, Myocardial Contusions pathology, Pericardial Effusion diagnostic imaging, Pericardial Effusion etiology, Pericardial Effusion pathology, Rib Fractures diagnostic imaging, Rib Fractures pathology, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Whole Body Imaging, Child Abuse diagnosis, Heart Ventricles injuries, Lacerations etiology
- Abstract
Traumatic cardiac ventricular ruptures in children are rare. Only a single case of left ventricular rupture due to child abuse has been reported. We report a child who sustained a fatal left ventricular apical rupture. It appeared to have resulted from hydrostatic forces resulting from abusive blunt thoracic injury. That he was being abused was previously missed when he was presented to the emergency department with facial pyoderma. It was not noted that he also had lip and oral mucosal injury, sites not affected by staph toxins. As a result, his underlying, abusive and secondarily infected, facial flow type scald burn was not appreciated. Within a week thereafter his fatal injury occurred, accompanied by extensive and obvious associated abusive injuries. Postmortem high-detail whole body computed tomography scanning aided the autopsy. Although rare, ventricular rupture from abusive blunt thoracic injury can occur., (© 2018 American Academy of Forensic Sciences.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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10. Skeletal Dysplasias: Radiologic Approach with Common and Notable Entities.
- Author
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Ngo AV, Thapa M, Otjen J, and Kamps SE
- Subjects
- Child, Diagnosis, Differential, Humans, Musculoskeletal Abnormalities diagnostic imaging, Osteochondrodysplasias diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Skeletal dysplasia is a heterogeneous group of abnormalities affecting growth and development of bone and cartilage characterized by disproportionate shortening of the limbs and/or spine. A systematic radiographic approach combined with pertinent clinical details can help guide specific genetic testing and treatment. We provide a discussion and examples of a few common and notable skeletal dysplasias to help familiarize general, pediatric, and musculoskeletal radiologists who do not commonly encounter children with these entities in their daily practices., Competing Interests: Disclosure The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work., (Thieme Medical Publishers 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA.)
- Published
- 2018
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11. Multiple echogenic liver masses from multifocal nodular steatosis in a 55-year-old male with chronic hepatitis C.
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Ingraham C, Bhargava P, Otjen J, Medverd JR, and Vaidya S
- Abstract
Hepatic steatosis is often seen in patients with hepatitis on screening ultrasound as generalized increased liver echogenecity. However, its nodular form can present as multiple echogenic masses, which can mimic hepatocellular carcinoma or metastasis by ultrasound and computed tomography. Small hepatocellular carcinomas are often hyperechoic and have a trend towards lower alpha-fetoprotein levels. Magnetic resonance imaging can accurately identify microscopic fat within the lesions and demonstrate lack of associated enhancing soft tissue. If this entity is not appropriately characterized using magnetic resonance imaging, it can lead to additional imaging workup and unnecessary biopsy.
- Published
- 2015
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12. Erratum to: Ultrasound-guided joint injections for MR arthrography in pediatric patients: how we do it.
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Otjen J, Parnell SE, Menashe S, and Thapa MM
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- 2015
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13. Ultrasound-guided joint injections for MR arthrography in pediatric patients: how we do it.
- Author
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Otjen J, Parnell SE, Menashe S, and Thapa MM
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- Child, Humans, Injections, Intra-Articular, Joints pathology, Arthrography, Joints diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Ultrasonography, Interventional methods
- Abstract
In children, MR arthrography is typically performed using fluoroscopic guidance. This article explores the role of US-guided joint injections as an alternative for MR arthrography in children, discussing its advantages and disadvantages compared to standard methods. We describe techniques for performing US-guided injection of the shoulder, elbow, hip, knee, ankle and posterior subtalar joints, highlighting pertinent anatomy, routes of access and unique considerations for this modality in children. Written descriptions, images and links to video clips are used to illustrate proper arthrographic technique. We conclude that US provides effective guidance for intra-articular injection prior to MR arthrography, with the advantages of improved visualization of internal structures, reduced radiation exposure, convenience of performing the procedure portably and ease of performance. Although this paper does not address therapeutic steroid injections, these techniques could easily be translated for such purposes. We propose US guidance as a viable alternative to fluoroscopic technique for arthrography in children.
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- 2015
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14. Techniques for creating video content for radiology education-erratum.
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Menashe S, Otjen J, and Thapa MM
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- 2015
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15. Techniques for creating video content for radiology education.
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Menashe S, Otjen J, and Thapa MM
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- Computer-Assisted Instruction, Humans, Internet, Software, Radiology education, Video Recording, Webcasts as Topic
- Abstract
Video podcasts, or vodcasts, are an innovative tool for teaching and learning that allow the efficient distribution of tutorials, lectures, and other educational content. Certain types of content lend themselves to presentation in a video format. For example, vodcasts are well suited to teaching radiologic procedures. Vodcasts might also be quite useful in demonstrating the use of an audience response system and how one system differs from another, providing background content before an active-learning session, comparing magnetic resonance imaging pulse sequences, and teaching valuable interpersonal skills such as how to deliver bad news to a patient or how to maintain professionalism in the work environment. The authors present a step-by-step text-and-video tutorial on how to create, edit, and export vodcasts using a variety of software tools, describing both the "how" and the "why" of creating vodcasts. Interested readers are encouraged to examine both the print and online versions of this article to gain a more comprehensive knowledge of the ideas presented by the authors. Online supplemental material is available for this article., (©RSNA, 2014.)
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- 2014
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16. Neuroimaging of migrational disorders in pediatric epilepsy.
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Taheri MR, Krauthamer A, Otjen J, Khanna PC, and Ishak GE
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- Brain pathology, Epilepsy complications, Epilepsy pathology, Epilepsy physiopathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Malformations of Cortical Development pathology, Malformations of Cortical Development physiopathology, Positron-Emission Tomography, Prognosis, Radiopharmaceuticals, Seizures etiology, Seizures pathology, Seizures physiopathology, Brain diagnostic imaging, Epilepsy diagnosis, Malformations of Cortical Development diagnosis, Neuroimaging, Seizures diagnosis
- Abstract
Seizures in children are common and represent a final pathway for a variety of brain insults. Although most children with seizures do not require imaging, when indicated, imaging plays an important role in the clinical workup. Imaging in the pediatric seizure population is reserved for a particular subset of patients depending on factors, such as age of onset, symptomatology, physical examination findings, and specific electroencephalography changes to name a few. The etiologies of seizures are extensive and include disorders of cortical migration and organization. Cortical migration and organization disorders are multifactorial and complex and a major cause of seizure disorders. Although magnetic resonance imaging is the most common imaging modality used to identify the seizure focus, positron emission tomographic and/or diffusion tensor imaging are beginning to provide complementary information about the involved areas. Early and accurate detection is key to better treatment and overall improved patient prognosis., (Copyright © 2012 Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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