9 results on '"R.O. Cleveland"'
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2. Pulsed waves for medical therapy
- Author
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A. Mishra and R.O. Cleveland
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Contributors
- Author
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A. Alippi, R.R. Andrés, M. Ashokkumar, F. Baillon, L. Barthe, A. Benatar, A.P. Bhat, J.A. Carcel, A. Cardoni, F. Chemat, R. Cleary, R.O. Cleveland, C. Cogné, G. Cravotto, Ch. Croënne, H. Delmas, B. Dubus, N.P.K. Ellens, D.G. Eskin, F. Espitalier, R.J. Friel, F.J. Fuchs, L.F. Gaete-Garretón, J.A. Gallego-Juárez, J.V. García-Pérez, A. Gedanken, P.R. Gogate, I. González-Gómez, K.F. Graff, P. Harkness, M. Hodnett, K. Hynynen, R.A. Khaire, J.D. Kramlick, S. Labouret, W. Lauterborn, Xi. Li, Xu. Li, L.R. Lindamood, X. Liu, O. Louisnard, M. Lucas, M. Marcus, T.J. Mason, M.P. Matheny, A. Mathieson, R. Mettin, A. Mishra, A. Moghaddas, P. Mosbah, A. Mulet, K. Nakamura, U. Neis, M. Norfolk, A.B. Pandit, L. Pardo, R. Peczalski, I. Perelshtein, N. Perkas, C. Pétrier, P. Prentice, E. Riera, G. Rodríguez, O.A. Sapozhnikov, M.E. Schafer, J.F. Sheehan, B.K. Tiwari, I. Tzanakis, Y.P. Vargas-Hernández, A.R. Videla, J. Virkutyte, A.D. Walmsley, Z. Wei, Z. Wu, Ch. Zhao, and X. Zhu
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Hare and the Tortoise: Does Shock Wave Rate Matter in Lithotripsy? A UK Pilot Study
- Author
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B.W. Turney, K. Schmitz, R.O. Cleveland, H.L. Cornwall, and M. Spencer
- Subjects
Shock wave ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tortoise ,business.industry ,General surgery ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Surgery ,General Medicine ,Lithotripsy ,business - Published
- 2018
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5. Ultrasound-guided localized detection of cavitation during, lithotripsy in pig kidney in vivo
- Author
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N.A. Miller, R.O. Cleveland, I.V. Pishchalnikova, James A. McAteer, Andrew P. Evan, Michael R. Bailey, Oleg A. Sapozhnikov, B.A. Connors, Yuri A. Pishchalnikov, Lawrence A. Crum, and P.M. Blomgren
- Subjects
Materials science ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Acoustics ,Confocal ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Ultrasound ,Lithotripsy ,Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy ,High-intensity focused ultrasound ,Cavitation ,medicine ,Focal length ,Fluoroscopy ,business ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
It is supposed that inertial cavitation plays a significant role in tissue damage during extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL). In this work we attempted to detect cavitation in tissue. In vivo experiments with pigs were conducted in a Dornier HM3 electrohydraulic lithotripter. Kidney alignment was made using fluoroscopy and B-mode ultrasound. Cavitation was detected by a dual passive cavitation detection (DPCD) system consisting of two confocal spherical bowl PZT transducers (1.15 MHz, focal length 10 cm, radius 10 cm). An ultrasound scanhead was placed between the transducers, an hyperechoic spots in the image indicated pockets of bubbles during ESWL. A coincidence-detection algorithm and the confocal transducers made it possible to localize cavitation to within a 4 mm diameter region. The signals from both the collecting system and kidney tissue were recorded. The targeting of the DPCD focus was confirmed by using the DPCD transducers as high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) sources at HIFU durations below the lesion formation threshold. In this HIFU regime, a bright spot appears in the B-mode image indicating the position of the DPCD focus. In this way we could confirm that refraction and scattering in tissue did not cause a misalignment. The tissue region interrogated was also marked with a lesion produced by HIFU. Clear cavitation signals were detected from the collecting system and from pools of blood that formed near the kidney capsule and weak signals were recorded from tissue during the ESWL treatment.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Scattering of ultrasound in cancellous bone: predictions from a theoretical model
- Author
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R Strelitzki, Patrick H. F. Nicholson, R.O Cleveland, and Mary L. Bouxsein
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Materials science ,business.industry ,Scattering ,Attenuation ,Acoustics ,Quantitative Biology::Tissues and Organs ,Rehabilitation ,Ultrasound ,Physics::Medical Physics ,Biomedical Engineering ,Biophysics ,Acoustic wave ,Models, Theoretical ,Bone and Bones ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Speed of sound ,medicine ,Humans ,Scattering, Radiation ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Ultrasonic sensor ,Porosity ,business ,Cancellous bone ,Ultrasonography - Abstract
An understanding of the interaction between acoustic waves and cancellous bone is needed in order to realize the full clinical potential of ultrasonic bone measurements. Scattering is likely to be of central importance but has received little attention to date. In this study, we adopted a theoretical model from the literature in which scattering was assumed to be proportional to the mean fluctuation in sound speed, and bone was considered to be a random continuum containing identical scatterers. The model required knowledge only of sound speeds in bone and marrow, porosity, and scatter size. Predicted attenuation, broadband ultrasonic attenuation (BUA) and backscatter coefficient were obtained for a range of porosities and scatterer sizes, and were found to be comparable to published values for cancellous bone. Trends in predicted BUA with porosity agreed with previous experimental observations. All three predicted acoustic parameters showed a non-linear dependence on scatterer size which was independent of porosity. These data confirm the value of the scattering approach and provide the first quantitative predictions of the independent influence of structure and porosity on bone acoustic properties.
- Published
- 2000
7. Assessment of microstructure and tissue elastic stiffness by site-matched acoustic microscopy and synchrotron radiation-μCT
- Author
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R.O. Cleveland, Pascal Laugier, Kay Raum, Ingrid Leguerney, Françoise Peyrin, Amena Saïed, M. Talmant, and Florent Chandelier
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Materials science ,Rehabilitation ,Biomedical Engineering ,Biophysics ,medicine ,Acoustic microscopy ,Synchrotron radiation ,Stiffness ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Composite material ,medicine.symptom ,Microstructure - Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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8. Reliability of MR Enterography Features for Describing Fibrostenosing Crohn Disease.
- Author
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Rieder F, Baker ME, Bruining DH, Fidler JL, Ehman EC, Sheedy SP, Heiken JP, Ream JM, Holmes DR 3rd, Inoue A, Mohammadinejad P, Lee YS, Taylor SA, Stoker J, Zou G, Wang Z, Rémillard J, Carter RE, Ottichilo R, Atkinson N, Siddiqui MT, Sunkesula VC, Ma C, Parker CE, Panés J, Rimola J, Jairath V, Feagan BG, and Fletcher JG
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Retrospective Studies, Adult, Reproducibility of Results, Constriction, Pathologic diagnostic imaging, Middle Aged, Crohn Disease diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
Background Clinical decision making and drug development for fibrostenosing Crohn disease is constrained by a lack of imaging definitions, scoring conventions, and validated end points. Purpose To assess the reliability of MR enterography features to describe Crohn disease strictures and determine correlation with stricture severity. Materials and Methods A retrospective study of patients with symptomatic terminal ileal Crohn disease strictures who underwent MR enterography at tertiary care centers (Cleveland Clinic: September 2013 to November 2020; Mayo Clinic: February 2008 to March 2019) was conducted by using convenience sampling. In the development phase, blinded and trained radiologists independently evaluated 26 MR enterography features from baseline and follow-up examinations performed more than 6 months apart, with no bowel resection performed between examinations. Follow-up examinations closest to 12 months after baseline were selected. Reliability was assessed using the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). In the validation phase, after five features were redefined, reliability was re-estimated in an independent convenience sample using baseline examinations. Multivariable linear regression analysis identified features with at least moderate interrater reliability (ICC ≥0.41) that were independently associated with stricture severity. Results Ninety-nine (mean age, 40 years ± 14 [SD]; 50 male) patients were included in the development group and 51 (mean age, 45 years ± 16 [SD]; 35 female) patients were included in the validation group. In the development group, nine features had at least moderate interrater reliability. One additional feature demonstrated moderate reliability in the validation group. Stricture length (ICC = 0.85 [95% CI: 0.75, 0.91] and 0.91 [95% CI: 0.75, 0.96] in development and validation phase, respectively) and maximal associated small bowel dilation (ICC = 0.74 [95% CI: 0.63, 0.80] and 0.73 [95% CI: 0.58, 0.87] in development and validation group, respectively) had the highest interrater reliability. Stricture length, maximal stricture wall thickness, and maximal associated small bowel dilation were independently (regression coefficients, 0.09-3.97; P < .001) associated with stricture severity. Conclusion MR enterography definitions and scoring conventions for reliably assessing features of Crohn disease strictures were developed and validated, and feature correlation with stricture severity was determined. © RSNA, 2024 Supplemental material is available for this article. See also the article by Rieder and Ma et al in this issue. See also the editorial by Galgano and Summerlin in this issue.
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- 2024
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9. Multicenter review of diaphragm pacing in spinal cord injury: successful not only in weaning from ventilators but also in bridging to independent respiration.
- Author
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Posluszny JA Jr, Onders R, Kerwin AJ, Weinstein MS, Stein DM, Knight J, Lottenberg L, Cheatham ML, Khansarinia S, Dayal S, Byers PM, and Diebel L
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Diaphragm innervation, Electric Stimulation Therapy instrumentation, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Injury Severity Score, Laparoscopy methods, Male, Middle Aged, Quadriplegia diagnosis, Quadriplegia therapy, Recovery of Function, Respiration, Respiration, Artificial methods, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Spinal Cord Injuries diagnosis, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Electric Stimulation Therapy methods, Electrodes, Implanted, Spinal Cord Injuries therapy, Ventilator Weaning methods
- Abstract
Background: Ventilator-dependent spinal cord-injured (SCI) patients require significant resources related to ventilator dependence. Diaphragm pacing (DP) has been shown to successfully replace mechanical ventilators for chronic ventilator-dependent tetraplegics. Early use of DP following SCI has not been described. Here, we report our multicenter review experience with the use of DP in the initial hospitalization after SCI., Methods: Under institutional review board approval for humanitarian use device, we retrospectively reviewed our multicenter nonrandomized interventional protocol of laparoscopic diaphragm motor point mapping with electrode implantation and subsequent diaphragm conditioning and ventilator weaning., Results: Twenty-nine patients with an average age of 31 years (range, 17-65 years) with only two females were identified. Mechanism of injury included motor vehicle collision (7), diving (6), gunshot wounds (4), falls (4), athletic injuries (3), bicycle collision (2), heavy object falling on spine (2), and motorcycle collision (1). Elapsed time from injury to surgery was 40 days (range, 3-112 days). Seven (24%) of the 29 patients who were evaluated for the DP placement had nonstimulatable diaphragms from either phrenic nerve damage or infarction of the involved phrenic motor neurons and were not implanted. Of the stimulatable patients undergoing DP, 72% (16 of 22) were completely free of ventilator support in an average of 10.2 days. For the remaining six DP patients, two had delayed weans of 180 days, three had partial weans using DP at times during the day, and one patient successfully implanted went to a long-term acute care hospital and subsequently had life-prolonging measures withdrawn. Eight patients (36%) had complete recovery of respiration, and DP wires were removed., Conclusion: Early laparoscopic diaphragm mapping and DP implantation can successfully wean traumatic cervical SCI patients from ventilator support. Early laparoscopic mapping is also diagnostic in that a nonstimulatable diaphragm is a convincing evidence of an inability to wean from ventilator support, and long-term ventilator management can be immediately instituted., Level of Evidence: Therapeutic study, level V.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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