79 results on '"non invasive measurement"'
Search Results
2. New Approaches for Continuous Non Invasive Blood Pressure Monitoring
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Zurek, Petr, Cerny, Martin, Prauzek, Michal, Krejcar, Ondrej, Penhaker, Marek, Magjarevic, Ratko, editor, Bamidis, Panagiotis D., editor, and Pallikarakis, Nicolas, editor
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- 2010
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3. Low-Cost Antenna-Array-Based Metamaterials for Non-Invasive Early-Stage Breast Tumor Detection in the Human Body
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Musa N. Hamza, Yadgar I. Abdulkarim, Salah Raza Saeed, Olcay Altıntaş, Rashad H. Mahmud, Bhargav Appasani, Cristian Ravariu, Havacılık ve Uzay Bilimleri Fakültesi -- Havacılık Elektrik ve Elektroniği Bölümü, and Altıntaş, Olcay
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Clinical Biochemistry ,Biomedical Engineering ,Breast tumor ,Breast Neoplasms ,Absorber ,Cancer staging ,Phantoms ,Analytical Chemistry ,Electromagnetism ,Microwave imaging ,Microstrip Antennas ,Humans ,Breast ,Human tissue ,Breast tumor microwave imaging (MWI) ,Instruments & Instrumentation ,Instrumentation ,Engineering (miscellaneous) ,Sensor ,Breast tissue ,Early cancer diagnosis ,antenna ,artificial magnetic conductor (AMC) ,breast tumor microwave imaging (MWI) ,biosensors ,General Medicine ,Computer simulation ,Chemistry ,Biosensors ,Human body ,Human cell ,Antenna ,Breast tumor cell line ,Equipment design ,Science & Technology - Other Topics ,Female ,Controlled study ,Artificial magnetic conductor (AMC) ,Human ,Non invasive measurement ,breast ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Microstrip patch antennas have been used in many applications since their appearance. Despite their great promise, their narrow bandwidth and the loss at high-frequency bands have limited their usage in medical applications. This work proposes a developed low-cost microstrip patch antenna suitable for microwave imaging (MWI) applications within the wideband frequency range. The proposed antenna is loaded with an artificial magnetic conductor (AMC) to improve the antenna performance. The simulated results obtained using computer simulation technology (CST) indicate that the presence of the AMC has improved the frequency selectivity of the antenna at 8.6 GHz with a peak realized gain of 9.90443 dBi and 10.61 dBi for simulated and measured results, respectively. The proposed microstrip antenna has been fabricated to validate the simulated results, and its performance is tested experimentally. Additionally, the fidelity factor of face-to-face (FtF) and side-by-side (SbS) scenarios have been presented. The breast phantom models with a tumor and the antenna operating as a transceiver have been numerically simulated for the application of cancer tumor cell detection. The work will have a significant impact on the design of electromagnetic biosensors.
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- 2022
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4. Arterial Stiffness in Type 1 Diabetes: The Case for the Arterial Wall Itself as a Target Organ
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Gonzalez-Clemente, Jose-Miguel; Cano, Albert; Albert, Lara; Gimenez-Palop, Olga; Romero, Ana; Berlanga, Eugenio; Vendrell, Joan; Llaurado, Gemma, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Gonzalez-Clemente, Jose-Miguel; Cano, Albert; Albert, Lara; Gimenez-Palop, Olga; Romero, Ana; Berlanga, Eugenio; Vendrell, Joan; Llaurado, Gemma
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Arterial stiffness (AS) integrates the cumulative burden of known and unknown cardiovascular risk factors on the elastic wall of large arteries along the lifespan of an individual. As a marker of vascular aging, AS is an independent predictor of cardiovascular events and improves cardiovascular risk prediction when added to the Framingham Risk Score. In addition, AS may affect the microvasculature and promote the development of microvascular complications. Its impact on both the macro- and microvasculature has led to the concept that the arterial wall itself should be considered as a target organ. Here, we review the biological and clinical consequences of AS on the macro- and microvasculature and the measurement of AS in routine clinical practice. We also discuss the pathophysiological mechanisms underpinning AS development using diabetes and, in particular, type 1 diabetes, as a disease model with a high risk of cardiovascular events and microvascular complications that are accelerated by AS.
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- 2021
5. The genetic architecture of membranous nephropathy and its potential to improve non-invasive diagnosis
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Taner Basturk, Ali G. Gharavi, Patrick Hamilton, Nan Chen, Kai-Uwe Eckardt, Weiming Wang, Paul Brenchley, Olivia Balderes, Dong Ki Kim, Elisabet Ars, Antonio Amoroso, Mehmet Sukru Sever, Neil Ashman, Bartosz Foroncewicz, Dan Zhang, Maddalena Marasa, Francesca Lugani, Elion Hoxha, Mario Bonomini, Gang Liu, Detlef Bockenhauer, Hakki Arikan, Pietro A. Canetta, Bruno Vogt, Magdalena Durlik, Carlo Sidore, Abdulmecit Yildiz, Mehmet Koc, Magdalena Zoledziewska, Simone Sanna-Cherchi, Antonello Pani, Domenico Santoro, Francesca Zanoni, Landino Allegri, Matthias Kretzler, Ireneusz Habura, Claudia Izzi, Naomi Issler, Carmelita Marcantoni, Isabella Pisani, Monica Bodria, Hajeong Lee, Krzysztof Mucha, Ruth J. F. Loos, Lawrence H. Beck, Laura H. Mariani, Rolf A.K. Stahl, Eimear E. Kenny, Gonca E. Karahan, Pierre Ronco, Robert Kleta, Francesco Scolari, José Ballarín, Francesco Londrino, Bénédicte Stengel, Dario Roccatello, Atlas Khan, Belong Cho, Gerald B. Appel, Lili Liu, Xiaofan Hu, Savas Ozturk, Karla Mehl, Ming hui Zhao, Ruth J. Pepper, Shreeram Akilesh, Zhao Cui, Yifu Li, Anna Köttgen, Lambertus A. Kiemeney, Fatih Ozay, Jack F.M. Wetzels, Stephen H. Powis, Jun Zhang, Silvana Savoldi, Hong Ren, Matthias Wuttke, John O. Connolly, Yon Su Kim, Gianluigi Zaza, Chris Cheshire, Simona Granata, Andrew S. Bomback, Nurhan Seyahi, Donatella Spotti, Vladimir Tesar, Stephanie Dufek, Fernando C. Fervenza, Krzysztof Kiryluk, Barbara Moszczuk, Leszek Pączek, Agnieszka Perkowska-Ptasińska, Nikol Mladkova, Shelly Harris, Loreto Gesualdo, Hitoshi Suzuki, Jin Ho Park, Jana Reiterova, Julia M. Hofstra, Francesco Cucca, Li Lin, Laila Yasmin Mani, Sanjana Gupta, Ben Sprangers, Iuliana Ionita-Laza, Daniel C. Cattran, Gian Marco Ghiggeri, Sebahat Akgul, Horia Stanescu, Matthew G. Sampson, Piergiorgio Messa, Xialian Yu, Marieke J H Coenen, Hanna Debiec, Jingyuan Xie, Jing Xu, Yasar Caliskan, Raphael J. Rosen, Priya Krithivasan, Marco Galliani, Xie, Jingyuan, Liu, Lili, Mladkova, Nikol, Li, Yifu, Ren, Hong, Wang, Weiming, Cui, Zhao, Lin, Li, Hu, Xiaofan, Yu, Xialian, Xu, Jing, Liu, Gang, Caliskan, Yasar, Sidore, Carlo, Balderes, Olivia, Rosen, Raphael J., Bodria, Monica, Zanoni, Francesca, Zhang, Jun Y., Krithivasan, Priya, Mehl, Karla, Marasa, Maddalena, Khan, Atlas, Ozay, Fatih, Canetta, Pietro A., Bomback, Andrew S., Appel, Gerald B., Sanna-Cherchi, Simone, Sampson, Matthew G., Mariani, Laura H., Perkowska-Ptasinska, Agnieszka, Durlik, Magdalena, Mucha, Krzysztof, Moszczuk, Barbara, Foroncewicz, Bartosz, Paczek, Leszek, Habura, Ireneusz, Ars, Elisabet, Ballarin, Jose, Mani, Laila-Yasmin, Vogt, Bruno, Ozturk, Savas, Yildiz, Abdulmecit, Seyahi, Nurhan, Arikan, Hakki, Koc, Mehmet, Basturk, Taner, Karahan, Gonca, Akgul, Sebahat Usta, Sever, Mehmet Sukru, Zhang, Dan, Santoro, Domenico, Bonomini, Mario, Londrino, Francesco, Gesualdo, Loreto, Reiterova, Jana, Tesar, Vladimir, Izzi, Claudia, Savoldi, Silvana, Spotti, Donatella, Marcantoni, Carmelita, Messa, Piergiorgio, Galliani, Marco, Roccatello, Dario, Granata, Simona, Zaza, Gianluigi, Lugani, Francesca, Ghiggeri, GianMarco, Pisani, Isabella, Allegri, Landino, Sprangers, Ben, Park, Jin-Ho, Cho, BeLong, Kim, Yon Su, Kim, Dong Ki, Suzuki, Hitoshi, Amoroso, Antonio, Cattran, Daniel C., Fervenza, Fernando C., Pani, Antonello, Hamilton, Patrick, Harris, Shelly, Gupta, Sanjana, Cheshire, Chris, Dufek, Stephanie, Issler, Naomi, Pepper, Ruth J., Connolly, John, Powis, Stephen, Bockenhauer, Detlef, Stanescu, Horia C., Ashman, Neil, Loos, Ruth J. F., Kenny, Eimear E., Wuttke, Matthias, Eckardt, Kai-Uwe, Koettgen, Anna, Hofstra, Julia M., Coenen, Marieke J. H., Kiemeney, Lambertus A., Akilesh, Shreeram, Kretzler, Matthias, Beck, Lawrence H., Stengel, Benedicte, Debiec, Hanna, Ronco, Pierre, Wetzels, Jack F. M., Zoledziewska, Magdalena, Cucca, Francesco, Ionita-Laza, Iuliana, Lee, Hajeong, Hoxha, Elion, Stahl, Rolf A. K., Brenchley, Paul, Scolari, Francesco, Zhao, Ming-hui, Gharavi, Ali G., Kleta, Robert, Chen, Nan, Kiryluk, Krzysztof, İÜC, Cerrahpaşa Tıp Fakültesi, Dahili Tıp Bilimleri Bölümü, Bursa Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Dahili Tıp Bilimleri., Yıldız, Abdülmecit, and GJU-0662-2022
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diagnosis ,Phospholipase A2 receptor ,Genome-wide association study ,Gene ,Glomerulonephritis, Membranous ,DISEASE ,membranous nephropahty ,PLA2R1 protein, human ,0302 clinical medicine ,Models ,Phospholipase A2 ,Ethnicity ,GWAS ,genetics ,Membranous Nephropathy ,lcsh:Science ,Diagnostic test accuracy study ,RISK ALLELES ,NFKB1 protein, human ,3. Good health ,HLA ,Urological cancers Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 15] ,Cohort analysis ,Testing method ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Science ,Immunology ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,Case control study ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Locus (genetics) ,Major clinical study ,Human leukocyte antigen ,European ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,White People ,03 medical and health sciences ,Membranous nephropathy ,Asian People ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Polymorphism ,GENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION ,Antibody ,Alleles ,METAANALYSIS ,Ancestry ,Autoimmune disease ,Receptors, Phospholipase A2 ,Case-control study ,Molecular ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,Immunoglobulin enhancer binding protein ,Case-Control Studies ,lcsh:Q ,Renal disorders Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 11] ,MHC ,0301 basic medicine ,Models, Molecular ,Enzyme linked immunosorbent assay ,PLA2R1 gene ,genetics, membranous nephropahty, GWAS, HLA ,NF-KAPPA-B ,030232 urology & nephrology ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Gene locus ,ACTIVATION ,Glomerulonephritis ,Receptors ,Membranous Nephropathy, genome-wide association study (GWAS), diagnosis ,Interferon regulatory factor 4 ,East Asian ,Allele ,Multidisciplinary ,Genetic analysis ,Membrane ,Single Nucleotide ,Sensitivity and specificity ,Interferon regulatory factor ,Interferon Regulatory Factors ,Asian Continental Ancestry Group ,EXPRESSION ,Detection method ,HLA antigen ,SUSCEPTIBILITY LOCI ,610 Medicine & health ,Caucasian ,Membranous ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Multidisciplinary sciences ,Molecular model ,Non invasive measurement ,Internal medicine ,NF-kappa B p50 Subunit ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,medicine ,Human tissue ,Membranous glomerulonephritis ,Genetic risk ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Summary Statistic ,Single Nucleotide Polymorphism ,RECEPTOR ,business.industry ,General Chemistry ,genome-wide association study (GWAS) ,Single nucleotide polymorphism ,Inflammatory diseases Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 5] ,business ,Controlled study ,Meta analysis - Abstract
Vogt, Bruno/0000-0002-1548-6387; Dufek, Stephanie/0000-0002-6323-6673; Liu, Lili/0000-0002-2622-9669; Paczek, Leszek/0000-0003-0160-3009; Cui, Zhao/0000-0002-5837-1926; amoroso, antonio/0000-0002-9437-9407; Rosen, Raphael/0000-0003-1025-1965; Loos, Ruth/0000-0002-8532-5087; coenen, marieke/0000-0001-8796-2031; zanoni, francesca/0000-0001-9567-6713; CUCCA, Francesco/0000-0002-7414-1995; Ars, Elisabet/0000-0002-4118-4358; Hamilton, Patrick/0000-0001-6703-3745 WOS:000563559600001 PubMed ID: 32231244 Membranous Nephropathy (MN) is a rare autoimmune cause of kidney failure. Here we report a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for primary MN in 3,782 cases and 9,038 controls of East Asian and European ancestries. We discover two previously unreported loci, NFKB1 (rs230540, OR = 1.25, P = 3.4 x 10(-12)) and IRF4 (rs9405192, OR = 1.29, P = 1.4 x 10(-14)), fine-map the PLA2R1 locus (rs17831251, OR = 2.25, P = 4.7 x 10(-103)) and report ancestry-specific effects of three classical HLA alleles: DRB1*1501 in East Asians (OR = 3.81, P = 2.0 x 10(-49)), DQA1*0501 in Europeans (OR = 2.88, P = 5.7 x 10(-93)), and DRB1*0301 in both ethnicities (OR = 3.50, P = 9.2 x 10(-23) and OR = 3.39, P = 5.2 x 10(-82), respectively). GWAS loci explain 32% of disease risk in East Asians and 25% in Europeans, and correctly re-classify 20-37% of the cases in validation cohorts that are antibody-negative by the serum anti-PLA2R ELISA diagnostic test. Our findings highlight an unusual genetic architecture of MN, with four loci and their interactions accounting for nearly one-third of the disease risk. National Institute for Diabetes and Digestive Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) [RC2-DK116690, R01-DK105124, R01-DK097053, R01-DK108805]; National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD)United States Department of Health & Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health (NIH) - USANIH National Institute on Minority Health & Health Disparities (NIMHD) [R01-MD009223]; Charles Woodson Clinical Research Fund; Nephrotic Syndrome Study Network Consortium (NEPTUNE) [U54-DK-083912]; Columbia University, Columbia Glomerular Center; Office of Rare Diseases Research, National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS); National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive, and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)United States Department of Health & Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health (NIH) - USANIH National Institute of Diabetes & Digestive & Kidney Diseases (NIDDK); University of MichiganUniversity of Michigan System; NephCure Kidney International; Halpin Foundation; National Key Research and Development Program of China [2016YFC0904100]; Natural Science Foundation of ChinaNational Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [81621092]; National Natural Science Foundation of ChinaNational Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [81870460, 81570598]; Science and Technology Innovation Action Plan of Shanghai Science and Technology Committee [17441902200]; Shanghai Municipal Education Commission, Gaofeng, Clinical Medicine Grant [20152207]; Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Multi-Center Clinical Research Project [DLY201510]; International Cooperation and Exchange Projects of Shanghai Science and Technology Committee [14430721000]; Outstanding Young Scholar Award [81622009]; Shanghai Health and Family Planning Committee Hundred Talents Program [2018BR37]; Seoul National University Hospital Human Biobank, a member of the National Biobank of Korea - Ministry of Health and Welfare, Republic of Korea; MRCMedical Research Council UK (MRC) [MR/J010847/1]; Manchester Academic Health Science Centre [MAHSC 186/200]; Greater Manchester Local Clinical Research Network; Kidneys for Life Charity; David and Elaine Potter Charitable Foundation; St Peter's Trust for Kidney, Bladder and Prostate Research; Kids Kidney Research UKKidney Research UK (KRUK); Kidney Research UKKidney Research UK (KRUK); Italian Ministry of Health grantMinistry of Health, Italy [GR-2011-02350438]; Department of Excellence Grant 2018-2022 - Italian Ministry of Education for the Department of Medical Sciences of the University of Turin; Columbia University; Poznan University of Medical Sciences, Poland; German Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)Federal Ministry of Education & Research (BMBF) [01ER0804]; KfH Foundation for Preventive Medicine; Bayer Pharma AG; German Research FoundationGerman Research Foundation (DFG) [CRC 1140, KO 3598/3-1, CRC 992]; European Research CouncilEuropean Research Council (ERC) [ERC-2012ADG_2012-0314, 322947]; 7th Framework Programme of the European Community contract [2012-305608]; National Research Agency grant MNaims [ANR-17-CE17-0012-01]; Dutch Kidney Foundation [OW08, KJPB11.021]; National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)United States Department of Health & Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health (NIH) - USANIH National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI); NIMHD We are grateful to all study participants across multiple nephrology centres worldwide for their contributions to this work. This work was supported by the following institutions, grants and funding agencies in the US: Columbia University, Columbia Glomerular Center, National Institute for Diabetes and Digestive Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) grants RC2-DK116690 (K.K., M.K.), R01-DK105124 (K.K.), R01-DK097053 (L.H.B., M.K.), R01-DK108805 (M.G.S.), and National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD) grant R01-MD009223 (K.K., A.G.G., A.B.). M.G.S. is additionally supported by the Charles Woodson Clinical Research Fund. The Nephrotic Syndrome Study Network Consortium (NEPTUNE), U54-DK-083912, is a part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Rare Disease Clinical Research Network (RDCRN), supported through a collaboration between the Office of Rare Diseases Research, National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) and the National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive, and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). Additional funding and/or programmatic support for this project has also been provided by the University of Michigan, the NephCure Kidney International and the Halpin Foundation. The recruitment and analysis of the Chinese cohorts were supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (2016YFC0904100), Natural Science Foundation of China to the Innovation Research Group (81621092), National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 81870460, 81570598), Science and Technology Innovation Action Plan of Shanghai Science and Technology Committee (No.17441902200), Shanghai Municipal Education Commission, Gaofeng, Clinical Medicine Grant (No.20152207), Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Multi-Center Clinical Research Project (No.DLY201510), International Cooperation and Exchange Projects of Shanghai Science and Technology Committee (No.14430721000), the Outstanding Young Scholar Award for Zhao Cui (No.81622009), and Shanghai Health and Family Planning Committee Hundred Talents Program for Jingyuan Xie (No.2018BR37). The recruitment of the Korean cohort was supported by the Seoul National University Hospital Human Biobank, a member of the National Biobank of Korea, financed by the Ministry of Health and Welfare, Republic of Korea. P.B. and P.H. acknowledge financial support from MRC project "Autoimmunity in Membranous Nephropathy", grant MR/J010847/1 which funded the sample collection from MN patients across the UK. P.B., P.H. and S.H. acknowledge support from Manchester Academic Health Science Centre (MAHSC 186/200), the Greater Manchester Local Clinical Research Network and Kidneys for Life Charity for supporting research in MN in Manchester. We are grateful to the MENTOR study (clinical trials no. NCT01180036), for contributing blood samples of trial participants. The UK cohort was supported in part by grants from the David and Elaine Potter Charitable Foundation (to S.H.P. and R.K.), St Peter's Trust for Kidney, Bladder and Prostate Research (to D.B., H.C.S., S.H.P. and R.K.), Kids Kidney Research UK and Kidney Research UK (to D.B. and R.K.). The Italian cohorts were supported by the Italian Ministry of Health grant GR-2011-02350438 (G.Z., S.G.) and the Department of Excellence Grant 2018-2022 funded by the Italian Ministry of Education for the Department of Medical Sciences of the University of Turin (A.A.).; The recruitment of Polish cases was sponsored by the Polish Kidney Genetics Network (POLYGENES), a collaborative effort between Columbia University and Poznan University of Medical Sciences, Poland. The full list of POLYGENES collaborators can be found in the Supplementary Materials. The GCKD (German Chronic Kidney Disease) study was funded by grants from the German Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF, No. 01ER0804) and the KfH Foundation for Preventive Medicine, with genotyping supported by Bayer Pharma AG. The list of GCKD investigators can be found in the Supplementary Materials. The work of M.W. and A.K. was funded by the CRC 1140 Initiative and by KO 3598/3-1 and CRC 992 (A.K.) of the German Research Foundation. The work of E.H. and R.A.K.S. was funded by the CRC 1192 from the German Research Foundation (Projects B1 and C1). P.R. is a recipient of European Research Council ERC-2012ADG_2012-0314 grant 322947, 7th Framework Programme of the European Community contract 2012-305608 (European Consortium for High-Throughput Research in Rare Kidney Diseases), and the National Research Agency grant MNaims (ANR-17-CE17-0012-01). The Dutch studies were supported by grants from the Dutch Kidney Foundation to JMH and JFW (Nierstichting Nederland grant OW08 and grant KJPB11.021). We would like to thank the Population Architecture Using Genomics and Epidemiology (PAGE) consortium, funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) with co-funding from the NIMHD, for providing population controls for this study. For full acknowledgment of the PAGE consortium, please see Supplementary Materials. The funding sources were not involved in the study design, collection, analysis, and interpretation of data, writing of the report, or in the decision to submit the paper for publication.
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- 2020
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6. Non-invasive CT-derived fractional flow reserve and static rest and stress CT myocardial perfusion imaging for detection of haemodynamically significant coronary stenosis.
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Sorgaard M., Seneviratne S.K., Adams D., Cameron J.D., Ko B.S., Linde J.J., Ihdayhid A.-R., Norgaard B.L., Crossett M., Kofoed K.F., Sorgaard M., Seneviratne S.K., Adams D., Cameron J.D., Ko B.S., Linde J.J., Ihdayhid A.-R., Norgaard B.L., Crossett M., and Kofoed K.F.
- Abstract
Computed tomography derived fractional flow reserve (FFRCT) and computed tomography stress myocardial perfusion imaging (CTP) are techniques to assess haemodynamic significance of coronary stenosis. To compare the diagnostic performance of FFRCT and static rest/stress CTP in detecting fractional flow reserve (FFR) defined haemodynamically-significant stenosis (FFR <= 0.8). Fifty-one patients (96 vessels) with suspected coronary artery disease from a single institution planned for elective invasive-angiography prospectively underwent research indicated 320-detector-CT-coronary-angiography (CTA) and adenosine-stress CTP and invasive FFR. Analyses were performed in separate core-laboratories for FFRCT and CTP blinded to FFR results. Myocardial perfusion was assessed visually and semi-quantitatively by transmural perfusion ratio (TPR). Invasive FFR <= 0.8 was present in 33% of vessels and 49% of patients. FFRCT, visual CTP and TPR analysis was feasible in 96%, 92% and 92% of patients respectively. Overall per-vessel sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic accuracy for FFRCT were 81%, 85%, 84%, for visual CTP were 50%, 89%, 75% and for TPR were 69%, 48%, 56% respectively. Receiver-operating-characteristics curve analysis demonstrated larger per vessel area-under-curve (AUC) for FFRCT (0.89) compared with visual CTP (0.70; p < 0.001), TPR (0.58; p < 0.001) and CTA (0.70; p = 0.0007); AUC for CTA + FFRCT (0.91) was higher than CTA + visual CTP (0.77, p = 0.008) and CTA + TPR (0.74, p < 0.001). Per-patient AUC for FFRCT (0.90) was higher than visual CTP (0.69; p = 0.0016), TPR (0.56; p < 0.0001) and CTA (0.68; p = 0.001). Based on this selected cohort of patients FFRCT is superior to visually and semi-quantitatively assessed static rest/stress CTP in detecting haemodynamically-significant coronary stenosis as determined on invasive FFR.Copyright © 2019, The Author(s).
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- 2019
7. Automated detection of neutropenia using noninvasive video microscopy of superficial capillaries
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Yi Bin Chen, Ephraim P. Hochberg, Maria J. Ledesma-Carbayo, Marta Fabra Urdiol, Carlos Castro-Gonzalez, Arrate Muñoz-Barrutia, Ian Butterworth, Alberto Pablo-Trinidad, Candice Del Rio, Álvaro Sánchez-Ferro, Karem Humala, Nicholas J. Durr, Carolina Cerrato, Tom Vettenburg, Betsy Valles, Luis R. Soenksen, and Aurelien Bourquard
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Letter ,Population Research ,Non Invasive Measurement ,Outcome Assessment ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Video microscopy ,Learning Algorithm ,Gastroenterology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Medicine ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Peripheral Vein ,Disease Severity ,Area Under The Curve ,Telecomunicaciones ,Microscopy, Video ,Clinical Article ,Patient Risk ,Hematology ,3. Good health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blood Analysis ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Priority Journal ,Gold Standard ,Cohort Analysis ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neutropenia ,Side effect ,Medicina ,Video Microscopy ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,White blood cell ,Humans ,Biología y Biomedicina ,Febrile Neutropenia ,Chemotherapy ,Neutrophil Count ,business.industry ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Capillaries ,Early Diagnosis ,Spain ,Clinical Study ,Autologous Stem Cell Transplantation ,Patient Care ,business ,Febrile neutropenia ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Cancer patients undergoing cytotoxic chemotherapy are at elevated risk of developing serious infections.1 The risk of developing these infections increases when white blood cell (WBC) counts, particularly the absolute neutrophil counts (ANC), are reduced. This reduction in neutrophil counts, the most abundant white-blood-cell subtype, is referred to as neutropenia, with these infection episodes termed febrile neutropenia (FN). Patients have a high risk of developing FN during sustained severe neutropenia1 (ANC < 500/μL), which is a common side effect of cytotoxic chemotherapies. FN occurs frequently, currently in approximately one in six of all chemotherapy patients,2 and it is associated with a high rate of mortality,3 where 11% of patients die after one or several hospitalizations.4,5 In the United States alone, the associated cost due to such hospitalizations accounts for $2.7B dollars annually,2 contributing to up to 40% of the total cost of cancer treatments.
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- 2019
8. Comprehensive assessment of vascular health in patients; towards endothelium-guided therapy
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Stefan Chlopicki, Rafał Niżankowski, Agata Kowalewska, Agata Drozdz, and Marzena Frolow
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pulse contour analysis ,clinical evaluation ,Health Status ,pharmaceutical care ,pulse wave ,Carotid Intima-Media Thickness ,endothelial dysfunction ,non invasive procedure ,disease marker ,endothelial function ,Risk Factors ,flow-mediated dilation ,Endothelial dysfunction ,Pulse wave velocity ,analytic method ,plethysmography ,multiparametric assessment ,artery stiffness ,General Medicine ,digital thermal monitoring ,arterial stiffness ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,cardiovascular system ,Radiology ,non invasive measurement ,Blood Flow Velocity ,finger plethysmography ,cardiovascular risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endothelium ,Pulse Wave Analysis ,Endothelium ,blood vessel reactivity ,review ,Vascular health ,Vascular Stiffness ,peripheral artery tonometry ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,human ,cardiovascular diseases ,flow mediated dilation ,Pharmacology ,blood vessel function ,carotid artery ,business.industry ,arterial wall thickness ,clinical assessment ,medicine.disease ,carotid wall distensibility coefficient ,ankle brachial index ,biological monitoring ,peripheral arterial tonometry ,Arterial stiffness ,Endothelium, Vascular ,atherosclerosis ,Ankle ,business - Abstract
Endothelial function has diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic significance. A number of non-invasive techniques were introduced for its assessment, including flow-mediated dilation (FMD), finger plethysmography (RH-PAT) and digital thermal monitoring (DTM). All these methods can be performed simultaneously. In addition, various methods for measuring arterial wall stiffness are available such as: pulse wave analysis (PWA), pulse wave velocity (PWV), pulse contour analysis (PCA) and carotid wall distensibility coefficient (DC). Finally, carotid intima-media thickness (cIMT) and ankle brachial index (ABI) are used as surrogate read-outs of atherosclerosis. Here, we briefly describe the advantages, limitations and interrelationships of various methods used for the assessment of endothelial function, arterial stiffness, and present the concept of an integrated evaluation of vascular health based on multiple methods. This strategy may be useful to stratify cardiovascular risk and represents a step towards multiparametric assessment of endothelium for effective endothelium-guided therapy in patients with cardiovascular diseases.
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- 2015
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9. Measuring cerebrovascular autoregulation in preterm infants using near-infrared spectroscopy: an overview of the literature.
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Aries M.J.H., Verhagen E.A., Elting J.W.J., Czosnyka M., Austin T., Wong F.Y., Kooi E.M.W., Aries M.J.H., Verhagen E.A., Elting J.W.J., Czosnyka M., Austin T., Wong F.Y., and Kooi E.M.W.
- Abstract
Introduction: The preterm born infant's ability to regulate its cerebral blood flow (CBF) is crucial in preventing secondary ischemic and hemorrhagic damage in the developing brain. The relationship between arterial blood pressure (ABP) and CBF estimates, such as regional cerebral oxygenation as measured by near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), is an attractive option for continuous non-invasive assessment of cerebrovascular autoregulation. Areas covered: The authors performed a literature search to provide an overview of the current literature on various current clinical practices and methods to measure cerebrovascular autoregulation in the preterm infant by NIRS. The authors focused on various aspects: Characteristics of patient cohorts, surrogate measures for cerebral perfusion pressure, NIRS devices and their accompanying parameters, definitions for impaired cerebrovascular autoregulation, methods of measurements and clinical implications. Expert commentary: Autoregulation research in preterm infants has reported many methods for measuring autoregulation using different mathematical models, signal processing and data requirements. At present, it remains unclear which NIRS signals and algorithms should be used that result in the most accurate and clinically relevant assessment of cerebrovascular autoregulation. Future studies should focus on optimizing strategies for cerebrovascular autoregulation assessment in preterm infants in order to develop autoregulation-based cerebral perfusion treatment strategies.Copyright © 2017 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
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- 2017
10. Broader implications for the widened pulmonary artery?.
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MacDonald M.I. and MacDonald M.I.
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- 2017
11. An International Urogynecological Association (IUGA)/International Continence Society (ICS) joint report on the terminology for female anorectal dysfunction.
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Berghmans B., Hull T., Brody S., Haylen B.T., Sultan A.H., Monga A., Lee J., Emmanuel A., Norton C., Santoro G., Berghmans B., Hull T., Brody S., Haylen B.T., Sultan A.H., Monga A., Lee J., Emmanuel A., Norton C., and Santoro G.
- Abstract
Introduction: The terminology for anorectal dysfunction in women has long been in need of a specific clinically-based Consensus Report. Method(s): This Report combines the input of members of the Standardization and Terminology Committees of two International Organizations, the International Urogynecological Association (IUGA) and the International Continence Society (ICS), assisted on Committee by experts in their fields to form a Joint IUGA/ICS Working Group on Female Anorectal Terminology. Appropriate core clinical categories and sub classifications were developed to give an alphanumeric coding to each definition. An extensive process of twenty rounds of internal and external review was developed to exhaustively examine each definition, with decision-making by collective opinion (consensus). Result(s): A Terminology Report for anorectal dysfunction, encompassing over 130 separate definitions, has been developed. It is clinically based with the most common diagnoses defined. Clarity and user-friendliness have been key aims to make it interpretable by practitioners and trainees in all the different specialty groups involved in female pelvic floor dysfunction. Female-specific anorectal investigations and imaging (ultrasound, radiology and MRI) has been included whilst appropriate figures have been included to supplement and help clarify the text. Interval review (5-10 years) is anticipated to keep the document updated and as widely acceptable as possible. Conclusion(s): A consensus-based Terminology Report for female anorectal dysfunction terminology has been produced aimed at being a significant aid to clinical practice and a stimulus for research. Neurourol. Urodynam. 36:10-34, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc., and The International Urogynecological Association.
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- 2017
12. Non-invasive imaging and characterisation of human foot by multi-probe laser reflectometry and Monte Carlo simulation
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S. Nandakumar and Megha Singh
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Adult ,Male ,Noninvasive imaging ,Heel ,Materials science ,Monte Carlo method ,Biomedical Engineering ,Normal tissue ,Optics ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Median filter ,medicine ,Humans ,Scattering, Radiation ,Foot ,business.industry ,Lasers ,Laser reflectometry ,Computer Science Applications ,Intensity (physics) ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Computer simulation ,Electromagnetic wave backscattering ,Glucose ,Image reconstruction ,Interpolation ,Medical imaging ,Monte Carlo methods ,Color-coded images ,Multi-probe laser reflectometry ,Non-ivasive imaging ,Nornmalized backscattered intensity (NBI) ,Tissue ,glucose ,adult ,article ,controlled study ,diabetes mellitus ,diabetic foot ,foot sole ,forefoot ,heel ,human ,image analysis ,image processing ,image reconstruction ,imaging system ,laser ,male ,non invasive measurement ,patient positioning ,reflectometry ,tissue blood flow ,Monte Carlo Method ,business ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Diffusely backscattered signals from the human foot sole tissues of normal subjects (n=5) were obtained by multiprobe laser reflectometry. The colour-coded images were constructed from data on the variation of normalised backscattered intensity (NBI), after interpolation and median filtering. The maximum and minimum NBI values at the arch and heel regions of the foot sole, respectively, were observed. The mean NBI at the arch region was significantly higher compared with that at other regions (p < 0.0001). The images of optical parameters of normal tissues show point-to-point variation, attributed to their compositional changes. The pattern of variation of the NBI of a diabetic subject (glucose level 170 mg dl-1) was associated with highly significant variation at the lateral sides of the fore- and middle-foot compared with that of normal subjects. ? IFMBE: 2005.
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- 2005
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13. A hysteretic dc SQUID reading the flux states of an rf SQUID
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Carlo Cosmelli, Roberto Leoni, M. G. Castellano, Fabio Chiarello, P. Carelli, and Guido Torrioli
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Physics ,Superconductivity ,Dc squid ,Condensed matter physics ,Non invasive ,SQUID ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Inductive coupling ,Superconducting switch ,Magnetic flux ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Non invasive measurement ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Scanning SQUID microscopy ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Quantum ,Coherence (physics) - Abstract
We have realized a hysteretic dc SQUID to measure the flux states of a rf SQUID inductively coupled to the hysteretic dc SQUID. This type of measurement is required whenever is necessary to make a non invasive measure of the state of the rf SQUID. This is the case of measurements of macroscopic quantum coherence or measurements on q-bits systems. With the proposed set up the hysteretic dc SQUID can switch from the superconducting to the normal state depending on the total applied magnetic flux. On this system we measured at 4.2 K the change on the switching probability of the dc SQUID by varying the flux state of the rf SQUID. The experimental results agree very well with the theoretical predictions showing that this device can be used to perform non invasive measurements of the rf SQUID flux state.
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- 2001
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14. DTI studies of corpus callosum in bipolar disorder
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Matteo Balestrieri, Jair C. Soares, Ping Hong Yeh, Paolo Brambilla, Michele Tansella, and Marcella Bellani
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Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) ,Bipolar Disorder ,Bipolar disorder ,Corpus callosum ,Inter-hemispheric connectivity ,anisotropy ,brain tissue ,conference paper ,diffusion coefficient ,diffusion tensor imaging ,image analysis ,membrane permeability ,myelin deficiency ,non invasive measurement ,priority journal ,tissue structure ,Biochemistry ,Corpus Callosum ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,business.industry ,Extramural ,medicine.disease ,Diffusion imaging ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,business ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Although the pathogenesis of bipolar disorder is still not completely understood, there is evidence from imaging studies that abnormalities in inter-hemispheric communication may play a major role in the pathophysiology of bipolar disorder. In the present review, we discuss the most consistent findings from diffusion imaging studies exploring corpus callosum integrity in bipolar disorder.
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- 2009
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15. Diagnostic accuracy of combined coronary angiography and adenosine stress myocardial perfusion imaging using 320-detector computed tomography: A pilot study.
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Seneviratne S., Leung M., Antonis P., Nandurkar D., Kyi L., Cameron J., Ko B., Meredith I., Nasis A., Seneviratne S., Leung M., Antonis P., Nandurkar D., Kyi L., Cameron J., Ko B., Meredith I., and Nasis A.
- Abstract
Background: Computed tomography coronary angiography (CTA) is established for the non-invasive diagnosis of coronary artery disease (CAD), however in its current form CTA is limited in detecting myocardial ischaemia. We sought to determine whether adenosine stress CT myocardial perfusion imaging (CTP), when added to CTA, identifies perfusion abnormalities caused by obstructive CAD. Method(s): Twenty patients (age 66+/-9 years, 65% male) with no known CAD but abnormal single photon emission computed tomographymyocardial perfusion imaging (SPECT-MPI) underwent prospectively-gated adenosine stress 320-detector CTP and CTA, as well as invasive coronary angiography (ICA) within 60 days of SPECT-MPI. A blinded interventional cardiologist evaluated ICA images.Ablinded nuclear physician analysed SPECT-MPI images for fixed and reversible perfusion defects. CTP and CTA studies were assessed qualitatively by consensus between two blinded cardiologists. Vessels/territories with both >50% stenosis on ICA and corresponding perfusion defect on SPECT-MPI were defined as ischaemic and formed the reference standard against which combined CTP and CTA were compared. Result(s): All patients completed the CT protocol with diagnostic image quality (60 vessels/territories available for analysis). Sixteen vessels/territories (27%) were ischaemic by combined ICAand SPECT-MPI criteria. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value for combined CTP and CTA was 94%, 96%, 88%, and 98%, respectively on a per-vessel/territory basis. Mean combined CTP and CTA radiation dose was 9.2+/-6.1mSv compared to 13.2+/-2.2mSv for SPECT-MPI (p = 0.06). Conclusion(s): Combined 320-detector CTP and CTA is accurate in identifying obstructiveCADcausing perfusion abnormalities when compared with combined ICA and SPECT-MPI. This is achieved with acceptable radiation dose, comparable to SPECT-MPI.
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- 2015
16. Transcutaneous measurement of glomerular filtration rate in small rodents: Through the skin for the win?.
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Dickinson H., Ellery S.J., Cai X., Walker D.D., Kett M.M., Dickinson H., Ellery S.J., Cai X., Walker D.D., and Kett M.M.
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Rodent models of renal physiology and pathology are crucial to our understanding of the molecular, histological and functional sequelae that contribute to kidney diseases. One of the most important measures of renal function is glomerular filtration rate (GFR). While the accurate determination of GFR is pivotal to understanding the progression of disease and/or the benefits of treatment strategies, in rodents the conventional methods for assessment of GFR are inconvenient and cumbersome, not the least because they involve stress and often anaesthesia. The legitimacy of assay-based assessment of plasma and urine markers of GFR in mice has also been heavily scrutinized for their insensitivity to minor declines in GFR and inaccurate detection of renal biomarkers. While infusion-based clearance methods of GFR assessment are thus the gold standard in terms of accuracy, they are limited by the fact that they are primarily non-recovery procedures. This presents a dilemma when trying to document the progression of renal disease, as these measures cannot be taken in the same experimental subject. Here we review a technique of transcutaneous measurement of fluorescein isothiocyanate-labelled sinistrin to calculate GFR in small rodents, using a non-invasive clearance device (NIC-Kidney Device). This is a recently validated non-invasive technique for measuring GFR in small rodents that allows for the real-time measurement of GFR in conscious animals, without the need for plasma and urine assays.Copyright © 2014 Asian Pacific Society of Nephrology.
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- 2015
17. Non-invasive assessment of ?-carotene levels in the skin of colombian adults
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Ramírez-Vélez R., González-Ruiz K., García S., López-Alban C.A., Escudero N., and Agredo-Zúñiga R.A.
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Male ,Adult ,Reproducibility of results ,raman ,Race ,Adolescent ,Major clinical study ,Colombia ,Ethnic groups ,Article ,Non invasive measurement ,Nutritional status ,Confounding factors (epidemiology) ,Humans ,Adults ,Raman spectrometry ,Middle aged ,Skin pigmentation ,Spectroscopy ,Nutrition ,Skin ,Aged ,Beta carotene ,Biological markers ,Anthropometry ,Smoking ,?-carotenes ,Reproducibility ,Spectrum analysis ,Oxidation-reduction ,Correlation coefficient ,Young adult ,Body mass ,Body fat ,Arm ,Cross-sectional studies ,Waist circumference ,Female ,Sex factors ,Age factors ,Human - Abstract
Introduction: Carotenoid pigments have antioxidant properties beneficial for human health. Use of resonance Raman spectroscopy (RRS) as a reliable method for measuring carotenoid levels in tissues such as dermis has been suggested. However, data about the variability and reproducibility of this technique should be collected before it can be used. Objective: To assess reproducibility of RRS for detection of total ?-carotene levels in the skin of Colombian adults. Design: Forty-eight healthy men and 30 healthy women with various pigmentation levels were enrolled into the study. Measurements by RRS were performed in the palmar region and medial and lateral aspects of the arms. Odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals were calculated, adjusting for confounding factors: body mass index, waist circumference, percent body fat, age, race, smoking, and sex. Reproducibility of the technique was estimated using intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Results: Mean ?-carotene levels were 29.9±11.9 in men and 30.6±8.6 in women (. P=.787). No differences or significant associations were found of ?-carotene levels with confounding factors assessed by sex. ICCs were 0.89 in the palmar region, 0.85 in the medial aspect of arm, and 0.82 in the external aspect of arm. Conclusion: RRS spectroscopy is a reliable method for non-invasive measurement of ?-carotene levels in skin, and may be used as an important biomarker of antioxidant status in nutritional and health studies in humans. © 2012 SEEN.
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- 2012
18. A new non-invasive prenatal diagnosis of Down syndrome through epigenetic markers and real-time qPCR
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Patsalis, Philippos C., Tsaliki, Evdokia, Koumbaris, George L., Karagrigoriou, Alex, Velissariou, Voula, Papageorgiou, Elisavet A., and Karagrigoriou, Alex [0000-0002-4919-2133]
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Down syndrome ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Aneuploidy ,Differentially methylated regions ,immunoprecipitation ,Epigenesis, Genetic ,X chromosome ,single nucleotide polymorphism ,chromosome rearrangement ,Prenatal Diagnosis ,Drug Discovery ,gene mutation ,Methylated DNA immunoprecipitation ,conference paper ,Genetics ,DNA methylation ,Non-invasive prenatal diagnosis ,copy number variation ,chromosome 18 ,chromosome 13 ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,real time polymerase chain reaction ,diagnostic accuracy ,genetic marker ,non invasive measurement ,Prenatal diagnosis ,Biology ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,medicine ,Humans ,Epigenetics ,human ,aneuploidy ,Pharmacology ,prenatal diagnosis ,epigenetics ,Y chromosome ,cost effectiveness analysis ,Non invasive ,Fetal-specific DNA methylation markers ,DNA microarray ,quantitative assay ,medicine.disease ,sensitivity and specificity ,Down Syndrome ,high resolution oligoarray analysis - Abstract
Introduction: Non-invasive prenatal diagnosis (NIPD) of Down syndrome is rapidly evolving. Currently, two applications for NIPD of Down syndrome have been developed with potential and have displayed positive results the NIPD using next-generation sequencing technologies and the NIPD using the methylated DNA immunoprecipitation (MeDIP) real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Areas covered: The MeDIP real-time qPCR approach is based on the identification of differentially methylated regions (DMRs) and their use for discriminating normal from Down syndrome cases. DMRs were identified using high-resolution oligo-arrays. A subgroup of DMRs was selected for further investigation. Through the design of a discriminant equation which combines the results obtained from different DMRs, normal and abnormal cases are correctly classified indicating 100% sensitivity and specificity. Expert opinion: Previous studies have also identified DMRs between non-pregnant female blood and placental DNA. However, these methods have been associated with a number of limitations including the low sensitivity and/or specificity of the assays, the limited number of identified DMRs or methylation sensitive sites and SNPs located on DMRs. These limitations have been overawed by the development of the MeDIP real-time qPCR-based methodology. © 2012 Informa UK, Ltd. 12 SUPPL. 1 S155 S161 Cited By :10
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- 2012
19. Renovascular hypertension: Review
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Yildiz, S. and Yaylali, Y.T.
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percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty ,renovascular hypertension ,sex difference ,fibromuscular dysplasia ,review ,blood pressure regulation ,percutaneous transluminal angioplasty ,kidney artery stenosis ,kidney arteriography ,Hypertension ,revascularization ,stent ,human ,atherosclerosis ,non invasive measurement ,Renovascular ,Renal artery obstruction - Abstract
Hypertension, one of the risk factors for development of cardiovascular diseases, is classified as primary and secondary according to the mechanism of development. Secondary hypertension is the elevation of blood pressure, whose underlying cause can be defined and often be treatable. The most common cause of secondary hypertension is renovascular hypertension (RVHTN). RVHTN is defined as blood pressure elevation due to obstructive disease of one or two main renal arteries or their branches. The main reason of RVHTN is stenosis from atherosclerosis affecting main renal artery, and the most of the remaining cases are fibromuscular dysplasia. The former is mostly seen in men at an advanced age, the latter is especially seen in young women. If RVHTN is suspected after clinical evaluation, noninvasive diagnostic tests first must be done. If the non invasive test results are positive, renal arteriography must definitely be considered to confirm the diagnosis. The aim of therapy for RVHTN is to regulate blood pressure, prevent problems that are caused by ischemia due to renal artery stenosis, and reverse such problems. Severity of hypertension, etiology of RVHTN, the presence of renal function abnormalities, and the presence of comorbid conditions that affect the patient's survival are important in guiding treatment. Four treatment alternatives are under consideration for RVHTN cases: medical treatment, percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty (PTRA), PTRA and stent placement, and surgical revascularization. Every outpatient clinic should make a treatment choice according to their experience and after careful consideration of the patient's risks and benefits from revascularization therapy. Copyright © 2012 by Türkiye Klinikleri.
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- 2012
20. High proportion of male faeces in jaguar populations
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José A. Godoy, Francisco Palomares, Natália Mundim Tôrres, Anah Tereza de Almeida Jácomo, Mariana Malzoni Furtado, Patricia Carignano Torres, Cuauhtémoc Chávez, Séverine Roques, Leandro Silveira, José Vicente López-Bao, Claudia Keller, Begoña Adrados, Rahel Sollmann, Denise Mello do Prado, and Hayward, Matt
- Subjects
Male ,Veterinary medicine ,Felidae ,Jaguar ,Non Invasive Measurement ,Population Dynamics ,lcsh:Medicine ,Population density ,Biochemistry ,Behavioral Ecology ,Feces ,Panthera Onca ,Field Study ,Nucleic Acids ,Leopardus ,Spatial and Landscape Ecology ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Aetiology ,lcsh:Science ,Defecation ,Animalss ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,Ecology ,Animal Behavior ,Behavior, Animals ,Genetic Analysis ,Panthera onca ,Mammalogy ,Female ,Sequence Analysis ,Sex ratio ,Brazil ,Research Article ,General Science & Technology ,Interspecific Competition ,Population ,Leopardus Wiedi ,Zoology ,Biology ,Species Specificity ,biology.animal ,Animals ,Panthera ,Controlled Study ,Sex Ratio ,Terrestrial Ecology ,education ,Mexico ,Puma Concolor ,Population Density ,Brasil ,lcsh:R ,Computational Biology ,Interspecific competition ,DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Nonhuman ,Geographic Distribution ,Species Identification ,lcsh:Q ,Population Ecology ,Puma ,Leopardus Paradalis ,Feces Analysis - Abstract
Faeces provide relevant biological information which includes, with the application of genetic techniques, the sex and identity of individuals that defecated, thus providing potentially useful data onthe behaviour andecology of individuals, as well as the dynamics and structure of populations. This paper presents estimates of the sex ratio of different felid species (jaguar, Panthera onca; puma, Puma concolor; and ocelot/margay, Leopardus pardalis/Leopardus wiedi) as observed in field collected faeces, and proposes several hypotheses that could explain the strikingly high proportion of faeces from male jaguars. The proportion of male and female faeces was estimated using a non-invasive faecal sampling method in 14 study areas in Mexico and Brazil. Faecal samples were genetically analysed to identify the species, the sex and the individual (the latter only for samples identified as belonging to jaguars). Considering the three species, 72.6% of faeces (n=493) were from males; however, there were significant differences among them, with the proportion from males being higher for jaguars than for pumasandocelots/margays. Amale-bias was consistently observed in all study areas for jaguar faeces, but notfor the other species. For jaguars the trend wasthe samewhenconsidering the numberof individuals identified (n=68), with an average of 4.260.56 faeces per male and 2.060.36 per female. The observed faecal marking patterns might be related to the behaviour of female jaguars directed toward protecting litters from males, and in both male and female pumas, to prevent interspecific aggressions from male jaguars. The hypothesis that there are effectively more males than females in jaguar populations cannot bediscarded, which could bedueto the fact that females are territorial andmales are not, or a tendency for males to disperse into suboptimal areas for the species.
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- 2012
21. The future of medical diagnostics
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Tahwinder Upile, Arjun G. Yodh, Henricus J. C. M. Sterenborg, Jennifer E. Rosen, Alexander J. MacRobert, Hugh Barr, Ann Sandison, Khee C. Soo, Lin Ping Choo-Smith, Waseem Jerjes, I. Bing Tan, Colin Hopper, Max J. H. Witjes, Rebecca Richards-Kortum, Nicholas Stone, Katarina Svanberg, Arjen Amelink, Zhongping Chen, Christian S. Betz, Herbert Stepp, Malini Olivo, Justus Ilgner, Merrill A. Biel, Robert P L van Veen, Anil K. D'Cruz, Andreas Leunig, Irving J. Bigio, Adel K. El-Naggar, Lina Bolotine, Herbert C. Wolfsen, Vanderlei Salvador Bagnato, Brian C. Wilson, Kristian Berg, Charles A. Mosse, Gordon McKenzie, Brian J. F. Wong, Dominic J. Robinson, Ann M. Gillenwater, C Kendall, University College of London [London] (UCL), Beckman Laser Institute, University of California [Irvine] (UCI), University of California-University of California, Center for Optical Diagnostics and Therapy, Erasmus University Medical Center [Rotterdam] (Erasmus MC), Centre de Recherche en Automatique de Nancy (CRAN), Université Henri Poincaré - Nancy 1 (UHP)-Institut National Polytechnique de Lorraine (INPL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre Alexis Vautrin (CAV), Boston University [Boston] (BU), National Medical Laser Center, Radiation Oncology, Erasmus MC other, Guided Treatment in Optimal Selected Cancer Patients (GUTS), Biomedical Engineering and Physics, and Ear, Nose and Throat
- Subjects
IN-VIVO DETECTION ,OPTICAL COHERENCE TOMOGRAPHY ,Meeting Report ,confocal microscopy ,physical examination ,Spectrum Analysis, Raman ,01 natural sciences ,TERAPIA FOTODINÂMICA ,Presentation ,0302 clinical medicine ,optical biopsy ,differential diagnosis ,Raman spectrometry ,PATH-LENGTH SPECTROSCOPY ,Head and neck ,medical society ,conference paper ,Diagnostic Techniques and Procedures ,health care economics and organizations ,media_common ,Microscopy, Confocal ,Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared ,elastic scattering spectroscopy ,gold standard ,methodology ,BIOCHEMICAL-CHANGES ,3. Good health ,ELASTIC-SCATTERING SPECTROSCOPY ,[SDV.BBM.BP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry, Molecular Biology/Biophysics ,Optical diagnostics ,FLUORESCENCE SPECTROSCOPY ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Austria ,Head and neck surgery ,histopathology ,deferential path length spectroscopy ,diagnostic accuracy ,diagnostic procedure ,Spectrum analysis ,non invasive measurement ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Medical diagnostic ,malignant transformation ,spectroscopy ,near infrared spectroscopy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,microendoscopy ,review ,forecasting ,010309 optics ,Diagnosis, Differential ,03 medical and health sciences ,biopsy technique ,fluorescence analysis ,RAMAN-SPECTROSCOPY ,0103 physical sciences ,medicine ,biochemistry ,Medical physics ,endoscopy ,confocal reflectance microscopy ,business.industry ,Surgery ,AUTOFLUORESCENCE ,Otorhinolaryngology ,sensitivity and specificity ,TISSUE ,Cancer and Oncology ,ORAL-CANCER ,head and neck cancer ,business ,photodynamics - Abstract
While histopathology of excised tissue remains the gold standard for diagnosis, several new, non-invasive diagnostic techniques are being developed. They rely on physical and biochemical changes that precede and mirror malignant change within tissue. The basic principle involves simple optical techniques of tissue interrogation. Their accuracy, expressed as sensitivity and specificity, are reported in a number of studies suggests that they have a potential for cost effective, real-time, in situ diagnosis. We review the Third Scientific Meeting of the Head and Neck Optical Diagnostics Society held in Congress Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria on the 11th May 2011. For the first time the HNODS Annual Scientific Meeting was held in association with the International Photodynamic Association (IPA) and the European Platform for Photodynamic Medicine (EPPM). The aim was to enhance the interdisciplinary aspects of optical diagnostics and other photodynamic applications. The meeting included 2 sections: oral communication sessions running in parallel to the IPA programme and poster presentation sessions combined with the IPA and EPPM posters sessions. © 2011 Jerjes et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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- 2011
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22. Non-invasive vesicoureteral reflux detection: Heating risk studies for a new device
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Theodore J. Pysher, O. Klemetsen, Paul R. Stauffer, V. De Luca, Paolo F. Maccarini, Brent W. Snow, Kavitha Arunachalam, and Yngve Birkelund
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hot Temperature ,Urology ,Sus scrofa ,Urinary Bladder ,Slot antenna ,In Vitro Techniques ,Urine ,Kidney ,Vesicoureteral reflux ,Imaging phantom ,Abdominal wall ,medicine ,Animals ,New device ,Microwaves ,Vesico-Ureteral Reflux ,business.industry ,Non invasive ,Temperature ,Diagnostic Techniques, Urological ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,abdominal wall ,animal cell ,animal experiment ,animal model ,animal tissue ,bladder heating ,computer simulation ,controlled study ,female ,heating ,in vivo study ,microwave therapy ,muscle cell ,non invasive measurement ,nonhuman ,phantom ,priority journal ,risk factor ,swine ,temperature measurement ,vesicoureteral reflux ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,business ,Phantom studies ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Objective: To investigate a novel non-invasive device developed to warm bladder urine and to measure kidney temperature to detect vesicoureteral reflux. Materials and methods: Microwave antennas focused energy within the bladder. Phantom experiments measured the results. The heating protocol was optimized in an in-vivo porcine model, and then tested once, twice and three times consecutively in three pigs followed by pathologic examinations. Results: Computer simulations showed a dual concentric conductor square slot antenna to be the best. Phantom studies revealed that this antenna easily heated a bladder phantom without over heating intervening layers. In-vivo a bladder heating protocol of 3 min with 30 W each to two adjacent antennas 45 s on 15 s off followed by 15 min of 15 s on and 45 s off was sufficient. When pigs were heated once, twice and three times with this heating protocol, pathologic examination of all tissues in the heated area showed no thermal changes. More intensive heating in the animal may have resulted in damage to muscle fibers in the anterior abdominal wall. Conclusions: Selective warming of bladder urine was successfully demonstrated in phantom and animals. Localized heating for this novel vesicoureteral reflux device requires low-power levels and should be safe for humans. � 2010 Journal of Pediatric Urology Company. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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- 2011
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23. Diagnostic performance of filter paper lesion impression PCR for secondarily infected ulcers and nonulcerative lesions caused by cutaneous leishmaniasis
- Author
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Ana Pilar Ramos, Nicolas Veland, Donald E. Low, Alejandro Llanos-Cuentas, Flor Calderon, Andrea K. Boggild, Braulio M. Valencia, and Jorge Arevalo
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Diagnostic methods ,leishmania peruviana ,polymerase chain reaction ,species identification ,Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous ,filter paper lesion impression polymerase chain reaction ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Leishmania braziliensis ,law.invention ,Specimen Handling ,Lesion ,Cutaneous leishmaniasis ,law ,secondary infection ,Skin Ulcer ,protozoon culture ,Medicine ,Humans ,controlled study ,diagnostic test accuracy study ,Protozoal disease ,intermethod comparison ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#1.06.01 [https] ,Polymerase chain reaction ,restriction fragment length polymorphism ,Leishmania ,skin leishmaniasis ,predictive value ,business.industry ,Leishmania lainsoni ,smear ,Skin ulcer ,DNA, Protozoan ,medicine.disease ,Geimsa stained smear ,major clinical study ,Specimen collection ,priority journal ,leishmanin skin test ,Parasitology ,diagnostic value ,medicine.symptom ,microbiological examination ,business ,non invasive measurement - Abstract
We compared traditional cutaneous leishmaniasis diagnostic methods to filter paper lesion impression (FPLI) PCR for secondarily infected ulcers and nonulcerative lesions. The sensitivity and specificity of FPLI PCR for secondarily infected lesions ( n = 8) were 100%. In primarily nonulcerative lesions ( n = 15), the sensitivity of FPLI PCR was inferior to that of pooled-invasive-specimen PCR (72.7% versus 100%) ( P = 0.10). FPLI PCR is sensitive, specific, and unlike invasive procedures, can be used in secondarily infected ulcers. Invasive specimen collection is superior in nonulcerative lesions.
- Published
- 2011
24. High speed imaging and algorithms for non invasive vibrations measurement
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Mas, David, Ferrer, Belén, Espinosa, Julián, Pérez Rodríguez, Jorge, Roig Hernández, Ana Belén, Illueca Contri, Carlos, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Óptica, Farmacología y Anatomía, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Ingeniería de la Construcción, Obras Públicas e Infraestructura Urbana, Óptica y Ciencias de la Visión, and Grupo de Ensayo, Simulación y Modelización de Estructuras (GRESMES)
- Subjects
High speed imaging ,Non invasive measurement ,Ingeniería de la Construcción ,Óptica - Abstract
Comunicación presentada en EVACES 2011, 4th International Conference on Experimental Vibration Analysis for Civil Engineering Structures, Varenna (Lecco), Italy, October 3-5, 2011. Registration of displacements in civil structures is of great importance for assessing their performance, safety and integrity. Traditional sensors like accelerometers have a good response in a wide frequency band. Nevertheless their response depends on the squared frequency so they are more sensitive to high frequencies. This effect can mask vibration in the fundamental modes that may produce larger displacements. In addition to this, double integration from acceleration to shifts is not obvious since many inertial movements are ignored. High speed cameras can provide good results in measuring displacements. Unfortunately, resolution of these cameras is usually lower as higher is the acquiring speed, thus impeding their use for monitoring small vibrations or displacements from long distances. In order to overcome this limitation, subpixel techniques can be applied. These techniques are based on target detection and features extraction of an image, and permit increasing the accuracy by more than one order of magnitude. We have taken an elliptical object as a target. By image detection we can obtain its geometrical parameters and this way we can track rotations around the three main axis and translations in the plane perpendicular to the camera axis. The proposal has been tested both numerically and in in the lab, obtaining accuracies of 0,08 px. The method has been also tested on a real steel column, which is part of an emergency stair. This column was hit by a 1 kg pendulum and the movement was registered with two high speed cameras, an accelerometer and a linear displacement dial. Due to the impact, the dial lost contact with the columns and thus their measurements were no reliable. The accelerometer registered only the high frequency of the signal, while the low frequency was masked and only the two cameras registered the movement in the fundamental frequency. Camera results were validated with a finite element model LS-Dyna and posterior measurements with an accelerometer under a weaker impact, in order to avoid excitement for higher modes. Spanish Ministry of Science FIS2009-05639-E/FIS; Generalitat Valenciana PROMETEO/2011/21; Universidad de Alicante GRE10-09; Fundación CajaMurcia.
- Published
- 2011
25. Non-invasive cytology brush PCR diagnostic testing in mucosal leishmaniasis: superior performance to conventional biopsy with histopathology
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Flor Calderon, Donald E. Low, Braulio M. Valencia, Jorge Arevalo, Nicolas Veland, Andrea K. Boggild, Alejandro Llanos-Cuentas, and Ana Pilar Ramos
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Leishmaniasis, Mucocutaneous ,Pathology ,pharynx ,leishmania peruviana ,Biopsy ,polymerase chain reaction ,lcsh:Medicine ,Protozoology ,Biochemistry ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Gastroenterology ,DNA amplification ,Cytology ,Peru ,Medicine ,Mucosal leishmaniasis ,Leishmania species identification ,lcsh:Science ,Leishmaniasis ,comparative study ,restriction fragment length polymorphism ,Leishmania ,instrumentation ,clinical article ,Multidisciplinary ,skin leishmaniasis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Zoonotic Diseases ,Diagnostic test ,nose mucosa ,standard ,methodology ,clinical trial ,mucosal leishmaniasis ,Nucleic acids ,Infectious Diseases ,Veterinary Diseases ,Molecular Diagnostic Techniques ,Cytology brush ,uterine cervix cytology ,histopathology ,non invasive measurement ,Research Article ,Test Evaluation ,Neglected Tropical Diseases ,Skin Infections ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biophysics ,Microbiology ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Leishmania braziliensis ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Internal medicine ,molecular diagnosis ,Parasitic Diseases ,Humans ,controlled study ,diagnostic test accuracy study ,parasite identification ,intermethod comparison ,Biology ,leishmaniasis ,Skin Tests ,controlled clinical trial ,business.industry ,Non invasive ,Leishmania lainsoni ,lcsh:R ,cheek mucosa ,DNA ,human tissue ,cytology ,mouth mucosa ,Parastic Protozoans ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.01.00 [https] ,Parasitology ,Veterinary Science ,Histopathology ,lcsh:Q ,business - Abstract
Background: Traditional methods of diagnosing mucosal leishmaniasis (ML), such as biopsy with histopathology, are insensitive and require collection of an invasive diagnostic specimen. Methods: We compared standard invasive procedures including biopsy histopathology, biopsy PCR, and leishmanin skin test (LST) to a novel, non-invasive, cytology-brush based PCR for the diagnosis of ML in Lima, Peru. Consensus reference standard was 2/4 tests positive, and outcome measures were sensitivity and specificity. Leishmania species identification was performed by PCR-based assays of positive specimens. Results: Twenty-eight patients were enrolled, 23 of whom fulfilled criteria for a diagnosis of ML. Sensitivity and specificity of biopsy with histopathology were 21.7% [95% CI 4.9-38.5%] and 100%; 69.6% [95% CI 50.8-88.4%] and 100% for LST; 95.7% [95% CI 87.4-100%] and 100% for biopsy PCR; and 95.7% [95% CI 87.4-100%] and 90% [95% CI 71.4-100%] for cytology brush PCR using both Cervisoft® and Histobrush® cervical cytology brushes. Represented species identified by PCR-RFLP included: L. (V). braziliensis (n = 4), and L. (V). peruviana (n = 3). Conclusions: Use of commercial grade cytology brush PCR for diagnosis of ML is sensitive, rapid, well tolerated, and carries none of the risks of invasive diagnostic procedures such as biopsy. Further optimization is required for adequate species identification. Further evaluation of this method in field and other settings is warranted.
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- 2011
26. Functional tracheal narrowing: What does it mean on CT?.
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Lau K., Leong P., Lau T., Lau K., Leong P., and Lau T.
- Abstract
Learning Objectives: To review different types of expiratory functional tracheal narrowing and demonstrates the utility of 4-dimensional CT (4D-CT) in diagnosis, quantification, and treatment of these important conditions. Background(s): Functional expiratory tracheal narrowing occurs in 23% of unselected adults during bronchoscopy and is not uncommonly encountered on routine CT of chest. It has been poorly understood and often terms such as tracheomalacia, tracheobronchomalacia (TBM), dynamic airway collapse (DAC) and excessive dynamic airway collapse (EDAC) have been used indiscriminately. The first two describe luminal reduction from cartilage softening and the latter refers to luminal reduction from exaggerated posterior tracheal membrane movement. These disorders are often under-diagnosed clinically and can cause severe symptomatic airflow limitation with dypnoea, wheeze, and exercise intolerance. They can be misconstrued and mistreated as other diseases, such as difficult-to-treat asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The diagnosis and quantification of expiratory tracheal narrowing has crucial aetiological, therapeutic and prognostic implications. The gold standard for diagnosis has traditionally been bronchoscopy. 320-slice dynamic volume computed tomography permits assessment of movement of an organ and structure over time rendering 4-dimensional CT images. This 4D-CT becomes an emerging noninvasive method enables detection and quantification of airway conditions. Imaging Findings: DAC is a physiological process and is characterized by a lack of tracheal cartilage deformation and less than 50% luminal narrowing. EDAC occurs when tracheal area is reduced by greater than 50% on expiration with 'frown-like' exaggerated posterior membrane movement which may be difficult to judge without dynamic CT. It may be a transient phenomenon during acute dyspnea and responds to positive pressure ventilation. TBM indicates abnormality of the cartilage rings that
- Published
- 2014
27. Letter by Cameron et al regarding article, 'Differential impact of blood pressure-lowering drugs on central aortic pressure and clinical outcomes: Principal results of the Conduit Artery Function Evaluation (CAFE) Study' [3].
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Cameron J.D., Meredith I.T., Hope S.A., Cameron J.D., Meredith I.T., and Hope S.A.
- Published
- 2012
28. Coronary artery imaging in the new millennium.
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Helft G., Meredith I.T., Worthley S.G., Farouque H.M.O., Helft G., Meredith I.T., Worthley S.G., and Farouque H.M.O.
- Abstract
Atherosclerotic disease and its thrombotic complications remain the leading causes of mortality and morbidity in Western society. In Australia, cardiovascular disease is responsible for one in every 2.4 (41%) deaths and is the leading single cause of mortality. The crucial final common process for the conversion of a non-occlusive, often clinically silent, atherosclerotic lesion to a potentially fatal condition is plaque disruption. The mortality associated with atherosclerotic disease relates to the acute coronary syndromes, including acute myocardial infarction, unstable angina pectoris and sudden cardiac death. There is substantial clinical, experimental and post-mortem evidence demonstrating the role acute thrombosis upon a disrupted atherosclerotic plaque plays in the onset of acute coronary syndromes. Atherosclerotic plaque composition, rather than the stenotic severity, appears to be central in determining risk of both plaque rupture and subsequent thrombogenicity. In particular, a large lipid core and a thin fibrous cap render an atherosclerotic lesion susceptible or vulnerable to these complications. We are currently limited in our ability to accurately identify patients at risk for an acute coronary event. The armamentarium of diagnostic investigations, both non-invasive and invasive, currently clinically available is only able to provide us with data related to the stenotic severity of a coronary artery. The non-invasive testing includes stress-induced (exercise or pharmacological) ischaemic changes in electrical repolarisation, wall motion or myocardial radioactive-tracer uptake. The invasive test of coronary angiography, although the current 'gold standard' for the detection of coronary atherosclerotic disease, provides us with no data about the composition of the atherosclerotic lesion. However, the vast majority of acute coronary events involve a non-critically stenosed atherosclerotic lesion, and thus with currently available means of identification
- Published
- 2012
29. Determining the minimal clinically important difference criteria for the multidimensional fatigue inventory in a radiotherapy population.
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Burmeister B., Fleming J., Bennett S., Haines T., Purcell A., Burmeister B., Fleming J., Bennett S., Haines T., and Purcell A.
- Abstract
Purpose: The Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory (MFI) is a commonly used cancer-related fatigue assessment tool. Unlike other fatigue assessments, there are no published minimal clinically important difference (MCID) criteria for the MFI in cancer populations. MCID criteria determine the smallest change in scores that can be regarded as important, allowing clinicians and researchers to interpret the meaning of changes in patient's fatigue scores. This research aims to improve the clinical utility of the MFI by establishing MCID criteria for the MFI sub-scales in a radiotherapy population. Material(s) and Method(s): Two hundred ten patients undergoing radiotherapy were recruited to a single-centre prospective cohort study. Patients were assessed at three time points, at the start of radiotherapy, the end of radiotherapy and 6 weeks after radiotherapy completion. Assessment consisted of four clinically relevant constructs: (1) treatment impact on fatigue, (2) health-related quality of life, (3) performance status and (4) occupational productivity. These constructs were used as external or anchor-based measures to determine MCIDs for each sub-scale of the MFI. Result(s): Multiple MCIDs were identified, each from a different perspective based on the constructs cited. Researchers seeking to use a generic MCID may wish to use a two-point reference for each MFI sub-scale as it was consistent across the pre- and post-radiotherapy comparison and occupational productivity anchors. Conclusion(s): MCIDs validated in this study allow better interpretation of changes in MFI sub-scale scores and allow effect size calculations for determining sample size in future studies. © 2009 Springer-Verlag.
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- 2012
30. Body composition assessment in adults with cystic fibrosis: Comparison of dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry with skinfolds and bioelectrical impedance analysis.
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Nyulasi I., Wilson J., King S., Kotsimbos T., Bailey M., Nyulasi I., Wilson J., King S., Kotsimbos T., and Bailey M.
- Abstract
Objective: We compared body composition measurement in adults with cystic fibrosis (CF) by using non-invasive methods (skinfold thicknesses and bioelectrical impedance analysis [BIA]) with dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). Method(s): Seventy-six adults with CF (mean age 29.9 +/- 7.9 y, mean body mass index 21.5 +/- 2.5 kg/m2) were studied. Body composition was measured to calculate fat-free mass (FFM) using DXA, the sum of four skinfold thicknesses, and BIA (predictive equations of Lukaski and of Segal). Result(s): Mean FFM values +/- standard deviation measured using DXA were 54.8 +/- 7.3 kg in men and 41.2 +/- 3.9 kg in women. Mean FFM values measured using BIA/Lukaski were 51.5 +/- 7.8 kg in men and 40.4 +/- 4.9 kg in women (P < 0.0005 for men, not significant for women for comparison with DXA). Mean FFM values measured using BIA/Segal were 54.2 +/- 7.5 kg for men and 44.1 +/- 5.9 kg for women (not significant for men, P < 0.0005 for women for comparison with DXA). Mean FFM values measured using skinfolds were significantly higher than those for FFM with DXA (57.2 +/- 7.2 kg in men, 43.3 +/- 4.3 kg in women, P < 0.0005 for comparison with DXA). The 95% limits of agreement with FFM using DXA were, for men and women, respectively, -8.3 to 1.7 kg and -6.4 to 4.8 kg for BIA/Lukaski, -4.8 to 3.6 kg and -3.1 to 8.9 kg for BIA/Segal, and -2.8 to 7.3 kg and -1.5 to 5.7 kg for skinfolds. Conclusion(s): This study suggests that skinfold thickness measurements and BIA will incorrectly estimate FFM in many adults with CF compared with DXA measurements of FFM. These methods have limited application in the assessment of body composition in individual adult patients with CF. © 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2012
31. Repeatability of non-invasive measurement of intracerebral pulse wave velocity using transcranial Doppler.
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Cameron J., Rajkumar C., Bulpitt C.J., Gladdish S., Manawadu D., Banya W., Cameron J., Rajkumar C., Bulpitt C.J., Gladdish S., Manawadu D., and Banya W.
- Abstract
In the present study, the repeatability of three techniques for measuring peripheral PWV (pulse wave velocity) has been studied. A transcranial Doppler provided a wave reading from the middle cerebral artery. Using the transit time between the R-wave of an ECG and the 'foot' of this wave we were able to calculate a PWV (PWV-brain). An ear clip transducer provided a pressure wave reading (PWV-ear). A third pressure reading came from a Finapres transducer on the left middle finger (PWV-finger). The PWV was calculated as distance between two points/transit time of the pulse wave. Eleven volunteers had three sets of readings averaged for each technique taken in two separate sessions. There was good agreement between observers for the mean PWV values, and good agreement for mean results in different sessions. The RC%s (repeatability coefficient percentages) for between-observer repeatability in each session were good and approximately equivalent for PWV-finger (5-7%) and PWV-brain (5-7%). The repeatability of the PWV-ear measurement was less satisfactory (8-18%). The RC% for the same observer between sessions was less good, being 11% for the PWV-finger, 16-17% for PWV-brain and 11-19% for PWV-ear. The RC%s for the inter-session inter-observer measurements were between 10.7-12.1% for the PWV-finger, 14.7-19.5% for PWV-brain and 8.3-15% for PWV-ear. The transit time RC%s were lower in most measurements. The between-observer repeatability of all measures was satisfactory. Owing to the less good repeatability on different occasions, the use of PWV-brain and PWV-ear will depend on the magnitude of differences to be expected. © 2005 The Biochemical Society.
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- 2012
32. Assessment of drug-class effects on central aortic blood pressure.
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Cameron J.D. and Cameron J.D.
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- 2012
33. Non-invasive evaluation of voiding function in asymptomatic primary school children
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Burcu Akpinar, Deniz Akata, Hasan Serkan Dogan, Serhat Gürocak, Mehmet Bakkaloglu, Serdar Tekgul, Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Üroloji Anabilim Dalı., Doğan, Hasan Serkan, and ABH-5513-2020
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Questionnaires ,Nephrology ,Male ,Scoring system ,Pediatrics ,Anus continence ,Micturition disorder ,Reference Values ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Urology & nephrology ,Predict ,Child ,Defecation ,Children ,Priority journal ,media_common ,Ultrasonography ,Surine flow-rates ,Voiding characteristics ,Schools ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Elementary student ,Urine flow rate ,Vesicoureteral reflux ,Ultrasound ,Toilet Training ,Diagnostic Techniques, Urological ,Normal human ,Human experiment ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Nocturnal enuresis ,medicine.symptom ,Symptom score ,Human ,Urethrography ,Bladder permeability ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urinalysis ,Bladder wall thickness ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Urinary system ,Urinary Bladder ,Urination ,Enuresis nocturna ,Asymptomatic ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Article ,Non invasive measurement ,Micturition ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Clinical evaluation ,Students ,Incontinence ,Detrusor muscle thicknes ,Questionnaire ,business.industry ,Diagnostic techniques,urological ,Standardized ultrasound method ,Urinary frequency ,Nocturnal Enuresis ,Deamino Arginine Vasopressin ,Overactive Bladder ,Sex difference ,Urination Disorders ,Urodynamics ,Preschool child ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Uroflowmetry ,School child ,business ,Controlled study - Abstract
Bu çalışma, 14-17 Eylül 2006 tarihleri arasında Antalya[Türkiye]'da dizinlenen 9. Biennial Meeting of the International Childrens Continence Society'da bildiri olarak sunulmuştur. This study aimed to evaluate the voiding characteristics of primary school children by using questionnaires and non-invasive diagnostic tools. The voiding characteristics of 212 healthy children in two primary schools were evaluated with ultrasound for bladder wall thickness (BWT) in association with the Pediatric Lower Urinary Tract Symptom Score (PLUTSS), familial questionnaire, uroflowmetry (UF) and urinalysis. Most of the children (70%) had achieved urinary and fecal continence between the ages of 18 months and 36 months. Twenty-five per cent of heathy children void fewer than four times or more than seven times per day. Ninety percent of children had a PLUTSS within normal ranges (< 9). Fifteen percent of patients had a uroflowmetric pattern other than bell-shaped. The peak and average flow rates were higher in girls. Enuresis nocturna was detected in 10% of children. None of the children had documented urinary tract infection. The average BWT from posterior wall at full bladder in healthy children was 1.1 mm. The anterior and posterior BWT measurements before and after micturition were found to be thicker in boys. Regarding the UF pattern, in post-voiding measurements in children with abnormal UF pattern, the bladder walls were thicker. Non-invasive tests in non-symptomatic children showed a range of variability, and these deviations should be kept in mind during the evaluation of voiding characteristics of a child. The symptom scoring system, with the high sensitivity and specificity rates it possesses, is one of the promising tools for this purpose.
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- 2007
34. F-18 fluorodeoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography scan in the initial evaluation of patients with a primary melanoma thicker than 4 mm
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Marie-Françoise Avril, Florence Masson, Andrea Cavalcanti, Alain Spatz, Jean Lumbroso, Anne Auperin, Eve Maubec, Frédéric Kolb, F. Boitier, Sophie Leboulleux, Gérard Mamelle, Voichita Suciu, Service de dermatologie, Département de médecine oncologique [Gustave Roussy], Institut Gustave Roussy (IGR)-Institut Gustave Roussy (IGR), Institut Gustave Roussy (IGR), Département d'imagerie médicale [Gustave Roussy], Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûreté Nucléaire (IRSN), Département de biologie et pathologie médicales [Gustave Roussy], Département de cancérologie cervico-faciale [Gustave Roussy] (CCF), Direction de la recherche clinique [Gustave Roussy], AP-HP - Hôpital Cochin Broca Hôtel Dieu [Paris], and Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)
- Subjects
Male ,Cancer Research ,positron emission tomography ,Skin Neoplasms ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Metastasis ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,0302 clinical medicine ,80 and over ,Medicine ,cancer cytodiagnosis ,Prospective Studies ,Lymph node ,Melanoma ,Aged, 80 and over ,clinical article ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Micrometastasis ,article ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,3. Good health ,fluorodeoxyglucose f 18 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,priority journal ,Oncology ,diagnostic test ,Positron emission tomography ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,diagnostic accuracy ,Female ,Lymph ,non invasive measurement ,prospective study ,Adult ,micrometastasis ,Adolescent ,Sentinel lymph node ,lymph node dissection ,Dermatology ,diagnostic approach route ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,false positive result ,Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 ,Predictive Value of Tests ,cervical lymph node ,Humans ,human ,Cancer staging ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,business.industry ,Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy ,cancer staging ,skin metastasis ,medicine.disease ,human tissue ,cancer size ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Lymph Nodes ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,business ,Nuclear medicine - Abstract
International audience; Metabolic imaging with F-18 fluorodeoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography is one of the most sensitive and non-invasive techniques, and has proved useful in melanoma. We designed, in 2004, at the Institute Gustave Roussy, a prospective study to determine the value of F-18 fluorodeoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography scanning in the detection of regional and/or distant metastasis in 25 new patients referred for the treatment of a primary melanoma thicker than 4 mm (tumor node metastases stage T4). The sentinel lymph node biopsy was proposed for all the patients without a palpable regional lymph node. Abnormal positron emission tomography scan findings were correlated to available histological data and to the course of the disease. The F-18 fluorodeoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography scan identified 0/2 intact primary melanomas, 1/4 residual primary melanomas after limited excision, 0/6 lymph node basins with micrometastasis, 4/4 lymph node basins with enlarged palpable lymph nodes and 0 distant metastasis. The sensitivity and specificity of positron emission tomography scans for microscopic lymph node disease in basins were, respectively, 0 and 92%. A false-positive F-18 fluorodeoxy-D- glucose positron emission tomography result in a cervical basin led to a useless cervical lymph node dissection. In three patients, the positron emission tomography scan was positive in distant sites but none of these foci represented a true metastasis.In conclusion, it is not useful to include a positron emission tomography scan in the initial work-up of patients with primary melanoma, even in patients with thick primary melanomas (>4 mm). Sentinel lymph node biopsy remains the technique of choice for the most accurate initial staging. © 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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35. Sensitivity of 1H NMR analysis of rat urine in relation to toxicometabonomics. Part I: Dose-dependent toxic fffects of Bromobenzene and paracetamol
- Subjects
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,paracetamol ,principal component analysis ,urinalysis ,Kidney ,proton nuclear magnetic resonance ,Hepatitis ,aspartate aminotransferase ,sensitivity analysis ,dose response ,rat ,Analgesics ,liver dysfunction ,article ,Alanine Transaminase ,biological marker ,liver toxicity ,Liver ,Metabonomics ,histopathology ,diagnostic accuracy ,diagnostic value ,Drug ,non invasive measurement ,early diagnosis ,alanine aminotransferase ,animal experiment ,animal tissue ,Dose-Response Relationship ,Necrosis ,male ,Non-Narcotic ,liver necrosis ,Animals ,bromobenzene ,controlled study ,Aspartate Aminotransferases ,intermethod comparison ,Biology ,Analytical research ,Acetaminophen ,nonhuman ,Rattus ,Hepatotoxicity ,pattern recognition ,clinical chemistry ,Toxic ,Rats ,drug blood level ,spectrometer ,aspartate aminotransferase blood level ,Biomarkers ,alanine aminotransferase blood level ,drug urine level ,Bromobenzenes - Abstract
1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of rat urine in combination with pattern recognition analysis was evaluated for early noninvasive detection of toxicity of investigational chemical entities. Bromobenzene (B) and paracetamol (P) were administered at five single oral dosages between 2 and 500 mg/kg and between 6 and 1800 mg/kg, respectively. The sensitivity of the proposed method to detect changes in the NMR spectra 24 and 48 h after single dosing was compared with histopathology and biochemical parameters in plasma and urine. Both B and P applied at the highest dosages induced liver necrosis and markedly increased aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) plasma levels. At dosages of 125 mg/kg B and 450 mg/kg P, liver necrosis and changes in AST and ALT were less pronounced, while at lower dose levels these effects could not be detected. Changes in kidney pathology or standard urine biochemistry were not observed at any of these dosages. Evaluation of the total NMR dataset showed 80 signals to be sensitive for B and P dosing. Principal component analysis on the reduced dataset revealed that NMR spectra were significantly different at dosages above 8 mg/kg (B) and 110 mg/kg (P) at both sampling times. This implies a 4- to 16-fold increased sensitivity of NMR versus histopathology and clinical chemistry in recognizing early events of liver toxicity. © The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Toxicology. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2007
36. Sensitivity of 1H NMR analysis of rat urine in relation to toxicometabonomics. Part I: Dose-dependent toxic fffects of Bromobenzene and paracetamol
- Author
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Schoonen, W.G.E.J., Kloks, C.P.A.M., Ploemen, J.P.H.T.M., Horbach, G.J., Smit, M.J., Zandberg, P., Mellema, J.R., Zuylen, C.T. van, Tas, A.C., Nesselrooij, J.H.J. van, Vogels, J.T.W.E., and TNO Kwaliteit van Leven
- Subjects
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,paracetamol ,principal component analysis ,urinalysis ,Kidney ,proton nuclear magnetic resonance ,aspartate aminotransferase ,sensitivity analysis ,dose response ,rat ,liver dysfunction ,article ,Alanine Transaminase ,Analgesics, Non-Narcotic ,biological marker ,liver toxicity ,Liver ,Metabonomics ,histopathology ,diagnostic accuracy ,diagnostic value ,non invasive measurement ,early diagnosis ,alanine aminotransferase ,animal experiment ,animal tissue ,Necrosis ,male ,liver necrosis ,Animals ,bromobenzene ,controlled study ,Aspartate Aminotransferases ,intermethod comparison ,Biology ,Analytical research ,Acetaminophen ,nonhuman ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Rattus ,Hepatotoxicity ,pattern recognition ,clinical chemistry ,Rats ,drug blood level ,Hepatitis, Toxic ,spectrometer ,aspartate aminotransferase blood level ,Biomarkers ,alanine aminotransferase blood level ,drug urine level ,Bromobenzenes - Abstract
1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of rat urine in combination with pattern recognition analysis was evaluated for early noninvasive detection of toxicity of investigational chemical entities. Bromobenzene (B) and paracetamol (P) were administered at five single oral dosages between 2 and 500 mg/kg and between 6 and 1800 mg/kg, respectively. The sensitivity of the proposed method to detect changes in the NMR spectra 24 and 48 h after single dosing was compared with histopathology and biochemical parameters in plasma and urine. Both B and P applied at the highest dosages induced liver necrosis and markedly increased aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) plasma levels. At dosages of 125 mg/kg B and 450 mg/kg P, liver necrosis and changes in AST and ALT were less pronounced, while at lower dose levels these effects could not be detected. Changes in kidney pathology or standard urine biochemistry were not observed at any of these dosages. Evaluation of the total NMR dataset showed 80 signals to be sensitive for B and P dosing. Principal component analysis on the reduced dataset revealed that NMR spectra were significantly different at dosages above 8 mg/kg (B) and 110 mg/kg (P) at both sampling times. This implies a 4- to 16-fold increased sensitivity of NMR versus histopathology and clinical chemistry in recognizing early events of liver toxicity. © The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Toxicology. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2007
37. High speed imaging and algorithms for non invasive vibrations measurement
- Author
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Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Óptica, Farmacología y Anatomía, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Ingeniería de la Construcción, Obras Públicas e Infraestructura Urbana, Mas, David, Ferrer, Belén, Espinosa, Julián, Pérez Rodríguez, Jorge, Roig Hernández, Ana Belén, Illueca Contri, Carlos, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Óptica, Farmacología y Anatomía, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Ingeniería de la Construcción, Obras Públicas e Infraestructura Urbana, Mas, David, Ferrer, Belén, Espinosa, Julián, Pérez Rodríguez, Jorge, Roig Hernández, Ana Belén, and Illueca Contri, Carlos
- Abstract
Registration of displacements in civil structures is of great importance for assessing their performance, safety and integrity. Traditional sensors like accelerometers have a good response in a wide frequency band. Nevertheless their response depends on the squared frequency so they are more sensitive to high frequencies. This effect can mask vibration in the fundamental modes that may produce larger displacements. In addition to this, double integration from acceleration to shifts is not obvious since many inertial movements are ignored. High speed cameras can provide good results in measuring displacements. Unfortunately, resolution of these cameras is usually lower as higher is the acquiring speed, thus impeding their use for monitoring small vibrations or displacements from long distances. In order to overcome this limitation, subpixel techniques can be applied. These techniques are based on target detection and features extraction of an image, and permit increasing the accuracy by more than one order of magnitude. We have taken an elliptical object as a target. By image detection we can obtain its geometrical parameters and this way we can track rotations around the three main axis and translations in the plane perpendicular to the camera axis. The proposal has been tested both numerically and in in the lab, obtaining accuracies of 0,08 px. The method has been also tested on a real steel column, which is part of an emergency stair. This column was hit by a 1 kg pendulum and the movement was registered with two high speed cameras, an accelerometer and a linear displacement dial. Due to the impact, the dial lost contact with the columns and thus their measurements were no reliable. The accelerometer registered only the high frequency of the signal, while the low frequency was masked and only the two cameras registered the movement in the fundamental frequency. Camera results were validated with a finite element model LS-Dyna and posterior measurements with an acc
- Published
- 2011
38. Non-invasive diagnosis of Tracheobronchomalacia in an infant with BPD using 320-slice CT bronchography.
- Author
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Ramsden C.A., Padmanaban S., Tan K., Ditchfield M., Hope S., Cossett M., Ramsden C.A., Padmanaban S., Tan K., Ditchfield M., Hope S., and Cossett M.
- Abstract
Background: Abnormal airway development may occur in preterm infants with BPD, giving rise to symptomatic bronchomalacia in infants with severe disease. This condition may be under recognised in this population because diagnosis has required highly invasive procedures to be undertaken (bronchoscopy or bronchograms). We present a 6-month old infant (born at 24 weeks gestation) with severe BPD and pulmonary hypertension. Tracheobronchomalacia was suspected on clinical grounds because of repeated episodes of sudden and profound hypercapnia (pCO2 up to 150 mmHg) precipitated by periods of activity and coughing, despite support with mechanical ventilation. Because of worsening respiratory function Dynamic Volumetric CT bronchography was performed to assess airway patency non-invasively. Method(s): Parental consent was obtained to perform dynamic chest CT with contrast (320 slice Aquilon ONE CT scanner, Toshiba). Mechanical ventilation was temporarily interrupted and airway pressure reduced to 0 mmHg. Non-gated continuous imaging was acquired over 2 s while theinfant was breathing spontaneously through an endotracheal tube. Result(s): The scan was well tolerated by the infant. Dynamic changes in airway patency were demonstrated through the respiratory cycle, diagnostic of extensive bronchomalacia. The 3D dataset permitted demonstration of relationships with cardiac and vascular structures. Lung parenchymal architecture was defined. Radiation dose was comparable with conventional spiral chest CT or bronchography. Conclusion(s): We have demonstrated that tracheobronchomalacia can be diagnosed non-invasively in a sick infant, using a 320-slice Dynamic chest CT. This imaging modality offers exciting opportunities to enhance diagnostic evaluation in severe lung disease.
- Published
- 2010
39. A new clinical design measuring the vertical axial rotation through tibial shaft resulting from passive knee and subtalar joints rotation in healthy subjects: A reliability study
- Author
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Feride Beydemir, Uğur Cavlak, Hasan Hallaceli, Murat Sari, and Ali Cimbiz
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,Subtalar Joint, tibial rotation, clinical goniometry, biomechanics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,knee function ,correlation analysis ,sex difference ,physical therapy student ,Axial rotation ,volunteer ,Rotation ,Subtalar joint ,biomechanics ,human experiment ,intrarater reliability ,male ,Clinical goniometry ,Reliability study ,medicine ,controlled study ,Biomechanics ,human ,normal human ,knee radiography ,joint mobility ,Orthodontics ,business.industry ,adult ,article ,Healthy subjects ,clinical assessment ,General Medicine ,economic aspect ,observer variation ,foot orthosis ,Surgery ,female ,tibia shaft ,Tibial rotation ,non invasive measurement ,business ,goniometry - Abstract
The main purposes of the study are to determine the intra-inter rater reliability of a new special designed clinical evaluation system; to measure the amount of the vertical axial rotation of the tibia resulting from passive rotation of knee and subtalar joints. To achieve this, the Measuring the Vertical Axial Rotation Tibial Shaft (MVARTS) system was designed. The system apparatus is applied to each knee and measured the vertical axial rotation of the tibia and subtalar rotations together. Fifty healthy subjects were e together. Fifty healthy subjects were examined using the suggested system. Two evaluators measured the tibial internal and external rotations, passively. The pure tibial rotation was also measured radiologically on the X-Ray in only 24 subjects The intra and inter observer variation was calculated between 2.1 and 38 degrees with high correlation (0.84-0 98). There was no significant difference between intra and inter observers' results (p 005). On the other hand, amount of the internal combined rotations was lower than the external rotation (p 001) The radiological extermal pure tibial rotations are 19.8t62 de g ( right ) , 170 1.6 İ ng ( left ) for the males whilst 28. 7+40 deg (right), 230+5.3 deg (left) for the females. The difference between the male and female subjects was also seen to be significant (p D.05). The results showed that the MVARTS system is an appropriate, noninvasive, fast to measure combined tibial and subtalar joint rotation in addition to be economically very efficient.
- Published
- 2006
40. Modelling the effect of air exchange on 222Rn and its progeny concentration in a tunnel atmosphere
- Author
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Frédéric Perrier, Jean-Christophe Sabroux, Patrick Richon, Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA), Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris (IPG Paris), Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûreté Nucléaire (IRSN), and Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris
- Subjects
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Radon Daughters ,Tunnels ,air pollution ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,law ,Natural ventilation ,Interfaces (materials) ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Air Movements ,reaction time ,Natural convection ,Atmospherics ,222Rn ,ventilation ,theoretical model ,article ,radon 222 ,radon ,Mechanics ,Pollution ,Deposition (aerosol physics) ,priority journal ,Air Pollution, Indoor ,Ventilation (architecture) ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,France ,non invasive measurement ,airflow ,Deposition rate ,geology ,Environmental Engineering ,Meteorology ,Tunnel ,Flow (psychology) ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Context (language use) ,Radon ,progeny ,Atmosphere ,Radiation Monitoring ,Environmental Chemistry ,reproducibility ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,concentration (parameters) ,atmospheric deposition ,Models, Theoretical ,chemistry ,Air Pollutants, Radioactive ,Air quality ,Environmental science ,Hydrology ,radiation protection ,Air pollution control ,Equilibrium factor - Abstract
The effect of air exchange on the concentration of 222Rn and its progeny in the atmosphere of the Roselend tunnel, in the French Alps, is estimated using a box modelling scheme. In this scheme, the atmosphere is divided into a small number of well mixed zones, separated by flow restricted interfaces, characterized by their exchange rate. A four-box model, representing the three sections of the tunnel present until 2001 and an adjacent inner room, accounts for the spatial variations of the background 222Rn concentration, and for the time structure of transient bursts observed regularly in this tunnel since 1995. A delay of the order of one day, observed during some transient bursts in the inner room with respect to the end of the tunnel, is accounted for if the bursts are assumed to be mainly generated in the end section of the tunnel, and stored temporarily in the inner room via air exchange. The measured radon concentration is reproduced by this model for an air exchange rate of 1.6×10-6 s-1 between the room and the tunnel, in a context of a global ventilation rate of 10-5 s-1 in the tunnel. Gradual onset and decay phases, varying from burst to burst, are also suggested. The equilibrium factor of 222Rn with its progeny, measured in 2002 with values varying from 0.60±0.05 to 0.78±0.06, is interpreted with a five-box model representing the five sections of the tunnel present after 2001. This model indicates that the equilibrium factor does not provide additional constraints on the air exchange rates, but the value of the deposition rate of the unattached short-lived radon progeny can be inferred, with results varying from 0.2 to 6 h-1 in the various sections. This study illustrates the benefits of a simple modelling tool to evaluate the effect of natural ventilation on 222Rn and its progeny concentration in underground cavities, which is important for radioprotection and for a reliable characterization of signatures of hydrogeological or geodynamical processes. Conversely, this study shows that 222Rn and progeny measurements provide a non-invasive method for characterizing natural ventilation conditions in delicate underground cavities, such as painted caves. © 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Neural network based approach for anomaly detection in the lungs region by electrical impedance tomography
- Author
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M. Ramasubba Reddy and Atul S. Minhas
- Subjects
Lung Diseases ,thoracic cavity ,Physiology ,Computer science ,diagnostic imaging ,Physics::Medical Physics ,Biomedical Engineering ,Biophysics ,finite element analysis ,lung blood flow ,Models, Biological ,Pattern Recognition, Automated ,Reduction (complexity) ,Physiology (medical) ,Electric Impedance ,Humans ,Computer Simulation ,Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted ,Plethysmography, Impedance ,Electrical impedance tomography ,analytical error ,Lung ,Model equation ,Artificial neural network ,business.industry ,computer assisted impedance tomography ,lung malformation ,Pattern recognition ,Radius ,Neural Networks (Computer) ,Flow (mathematics) ,priority journal ,Anomaly detection ,Artificial intelligence ,Neural Networks, Computer ,Anomaly (physics) ,business ,non invasive measurement ,artificial neural network ,mathematical model - Abstract
In this paper, we have shown a simple procedure to detect anomalies in the lungs region by electrical impedance tomography. The main aim of the present study is to investigate the possibility of anomaly detection by using neural networks. Radial basis function neural networks are used as classifiers to classify the anomaly as belonging to the anterior or posterior region of the left lung or the right lung. The neural networks are trained and tested with the simulated data obtained by solving the mathematical model equation governing current flow through the simulated thoracic region. The equation solution and model simulation are done with FEMLAB. The effect of adding a higher number of neurons to the hidden layer can be clearly seen by the reduction in classification error. The study shows that there is interaction between the size (radius) and conductivity of anomalies and for some combination of these two factors the classification error of neural networks will be very small. ? 2005 IOP Publishing Ltd.
- Published
- 2005
42. Arterial transfer functions and the reconstruction of central aortic waveforms: Myths, controversies and misconceptions.
- Author
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Cameron J.D., Hope S.A., Meredith I.T., Cameron J.D., Hope S.A., and Meredith I.T.
- Abstract
Continuing reports in the literature regarding the potential of central pulse wave analysis in clinical practice and a recent consensus statement demonstrate the increasing interest in the clinical application of arterial transfer functions. A number of misconceptions, however, persist regarding their use. In spite of ongoing controversy, there are considerable published data that would permit users to assess the validity and accuracy of the technique. We provide a comprehensive review of available data, all of which appear to be clear and consistent. The technique does not permit accurate reconstruction of central waveforms from entirely non-invasively acquired data. We should move on from the misconception that what is being studied is central aortic data when transfer functions are applied non-invasively, and accept that it is radial waveform data that have been passed through a single mathematical transformation. We have a readily applicable, non-invasive and reproducible technique for acquiring radial waveform data, with or without the application of a generalized arterial transfer function. We must explore the potential of this technique in an analytical manner, and without untenable preconceptions, if we are to learn the secrets that it may yet reveal. © 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.
- Published
- 2008
43. Non-invasive measurement of brain damage in a primate model of multiple sclerosis
- Author
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Jan Bauer, Bert A. 't Hart, Jack T. W. E. Vogels, Erwin L. A. Blezer, Herbert P.M. Brok, TNO Voeding, and Immunology
- Subjects
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Pathology ,positron emission tomography ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,urinalysis ,X ray analysis ,multiple sclerosis ,proton nuclear magnetic resonance ,Mice ,allergic encephalomyelitis ,Myelin Basic Proteins ,Callithrix jacchus ,Biology Health ,immunopathology ,nuclear magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis ,Marmoset ,Brain ,marmosets ,Callithrix ,neurologic disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,myelin ,Myelin-Associated Glycoprotein ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemometric analysis ,Molecular Medicine ,Biological Markers ,demyelination ,medicine.symptom ,non invasive measurement ,white matter ,Myelin Proteins ,Primates ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Encephalomyelitis, Autoimmune, Experimental ,Multiple Sclerosis ,diagnostic imaging ,Genes, MHC Class II ,review ,Rodentia ,Brain damage ,Neuropathology ,Biology ,White matter ,Th2 Cells ,Antigens, CD ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Animals, Outbred Strains ,Animalia ,Animals ,Humans ,human ,Molecular Biology ,Analytical research ,nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,marmoset ,neuropathology ,nonhuman ,Multiple sclerosis ,pattern recognition ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Myelin Basic Protein ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,brain injury ,Radiography ,Disease Models, Animal ,Chronic Disease ,Myelin-Oligodendrocyte Glycoprotein ,Biomarkers ,Demyelinating Diseases ,T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic - Abstract
Early recognition of whether a product has potential as a new therapy for treating multiple sclerosis (MS) relies upon the quality of the animal models used in the preclinical trials. The promising effects of new treatments in rodent models of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) have rarely been reproduced in patients suffering from MS. EAE in outbred marmoset monkeys, Callithrix jacchus, is a valid new model, and might provide an experimental link between EAE in rodent models and human MS. Using magnetic resonance imaging techniques similar to those used in patients suffering from MS pathological abnormalities in the brain, white matter of the animal can be visualized and quantified. Moreover, NMR spectroscopy, in combination with pattern recognition, offers an advanced uroscopic technique for the identification of biomarkers of inflammatory demyelination.
- Published
- 2004
44. Functional MRI at high field strength
- Author
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Tommaso Scarabino, O. Santopaolo, Adriana Aragri, Mario Cirillo, F. Di Salle, Andrea Elefante, Raffaele Elefante, Sossio Cirillo, Fabrizio Esposito, Di Salle, F, Scarabino, T, Esposito, F, Aragri, A, Santopaolo, O, Elefante, A, Cirillo, Mario, Cirillo, Sossio, and Elefante, R.
- Subjects
visual field ,Materials science ,functional anatomy ,neuroanatomy ,accuracy ,blood oxygen level dependent nuclear magnetic resonance ,brain electrophysiology ,brain function ,brodmann area ,electromagnetic field ,field of view ,functional magnetic resonance imaging ,human ,image quality ,information processing ,magnetic field strength ,nerve cell network ,neuroimaging ,neurophysiology ,neuroscience ,non invasive measurement ,occipital cortex ,optical resolution ,primate ,research ,review ,sensory cortex ,signal averaging ,signal noise ratio ,signal processing ,single unit activity ,spatial resolution ,statistical analysis ,technique ,temporal resolution ,visual cortex ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,High field strength ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI ,Neurology (clinical) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Published
- 2004
45. Assessment of left ventricular functions by atrioventricular plane displacement and conventional methods in patients with hypertension and diabetes mellitus
- Author
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Dursunoǧlu, D., Evrengül, H., Polat, B., Tanriverdi, H., Kaftan, A., and Kiliç, M.
- Subjects
hypertension ,adult ,article ,heart failure ,M mode echocardiography ,major clinical study ,body mass ,heart left ventricle failure ,female ,Diabetes mellitus ,diastole ,Atrioventricular plane displacement ,male ,validation process ,Left ventricular functions ,heart left ventricle function ,controlled study ,heart death ,human ,non invasive measurement ,intermethod comparison ,systole ,reproducibility ,heart left ventricle ejection fraction - Abstract
The left ventricular systolic and diastolic functions are closely related to mortality and morbidity. Early recognition and appropriate therapy of left ventricular dysfunction is advisable to prevent further progression of heart failure and death. The aim of this study is to estimate the left ventricular functions by AVPD and conventional methods in patients with hypertension (HT) and diabetes mellitus (DM). Eighty nine patients with HT and DM (50 female, 39 male and mean age 54.4±5.2 and 56.3±9.6, respectively) and 65 healthy subjects (34 female, 31 male, and mean ages 51.6±8.5 and 53.8±8.2) underwent complete echocardiographic assessment. There was no difference in ages of the patients and healthy subjects in both gender. The systolic mitral AVPD was recorded at 4 sites (septal, lateral, anterior, and posterior) by M-mode echocardiography and left ventricular ejection fraction was calculated from the AVPD- mean (EFAVPD). Female patients had significantly higher body mass index (BMI) (31.5±4.8kg/m2) than healthy female subjects (27.5±4.3 kg/M2, p
- Published
- 2004
46. Assessment of systolic function by atrioventricular plane displacement in patients with diastolic dysfunction
- Author
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Bülent Polat, Halil Tanriverdi, Dursun Dursunoglu, Asuman Kaftan, Harun Evrengul, and Mustafa Kilic
- Subjects
atrioventricular plane displacement method ,Male ,age distribution ,correlation analysis ,Statistics as Topic ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Diastole ,heart rate ,Medicine ,echocardiography ,Heart Failure, Congestive ,Ejection fraction ,accuracy ,adult ,Statistics ,article ,clinical trial ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Coronary Arteriosclerosis ,comorbidity ,Systolic functions ,female ,parameter ,Atrioventricular plane displacement ,diabetes mellitus ,Cardiology ,Diastolic dysfunction ,Mitral Valve ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,non invasive measurement ,Blood Flow Velocity ,medicine.medical_specialty ,hypertension ,Systole ,sex difference ,Heart Ventricles ,statistical analysis ,Heart Conduction System ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Heart rate ,Humans ,In patient ,controlled study ,human ,reproducibility ,Heart Failure ,reliability ,controlled clinical trial ,business.industry ,diastolic blood pressure ,heart left ventricle contraction ,Stroke Volume ,medicine.disease ,major clinical study ,body mass ,Heart failure ,business ,Body mass index ,heart left ventricle ejection fraction - Abstract
Objectives - Early recognition and appropriate therapy of diastolic dysfunction (DD) is advisable to prevent further progression to diastolic or systolic heart failure and death. The mitral atrioventricular plane displacement (AVPD) method has been shown to be a reliable and simple technique to study left ventricular systolic function in patients, because the mitral annulus can be visualized in almost all patients even if the endocardial borders are difficult to trace. The aim of our study is to estimate the left ventricular ejection fraction by AVPD method (EF A V P D ), in addition to Teicholz's short axis method (EF-T) and Simpson's biplane method (EF-2D) in patients with DD. Material and methods - One hundred and two subjects were submitted to complete echocardiographic assessment, and DD was shown in 62 patients. The systolic mitral AVPD was recorded at 4 sites (septal, lateral, anterior, and posterior) using M-mode and left ventricular ejection fraction was calculated from the AVPD-mean in 62 patients with DD (mean age 55.67 ′ 5.65, 24 men and 38 women) and in 40 age-matched control subjects (mean age 54.07 ′ 6.96, 15 men and 25 women). There were no statistically significant group differences related to age, gender, heart rate or body mass index. However, in the patients with DD, presence of hypertension and/or diabetes mellitus was significantly higher than control subjects. Results - The systolic functions, as assessed by conventional measures in patients with DD and healthy subjects were not stastically different, and were within normal limits. The septal, anterior, lateral and posterior part of the atrioventricular plane values and AVPD-mean during systole were statistically lower in the DD group (12.35 ′ 1.42mm) compared with controls (15.32 ′ 1.38 mm) (p < 0.001). EF A V P D in patients with DD was statistically lower (62.97 ′ 7.85%) than healthy subjects (79.30 ′ 7.60%) (p < 0.001). Significant positive correlations between EF A V P D and EF-2D (r = 0.325, p < 0.01) and EF-T (r = 0.355, p < 0.01) and FS (r = 0.314, p < 0.01) were found. EF A V P D correlated only with velocity of mitral flow propagation (VPR) in diastolic function parameters (r = 0.374, p < 0.01). Conclusions - The AVPD method may indicate a systolic dysfunction with a relatively lower AVPD-mean and relatively lower EF A V P D in the DD group compared with controls.This indicated the presence of a statistically significant and mildly reduced left ventricular systolic function by the AVPD method in patients with DD. It might be suggested that DD might be combined with systolic dysfunction. However, isolated diastolic dysfunction is uncommon.The mitral AVPD is reproducible, widely applicable and a simple non-invasive method for the estimation of left ventricular systolic function in patients with DD.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Non-invasive measurement of brain damage in a primate model of multiple sclerosis
- Subjects
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,positron emission tomography ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Cytotoxic ,urinalysis ,T-Lymphocytes ,X ray analysis ,multiple sclerosis ,proton nuclear magnetic resonance ,Mice ,allergic encephalomyelitis ,Myelin Basic Proteins ,Callithrix jacchus ,Biology Health ,immunopathology ,nuclear magnetic resonance imaging ,Encephalomyelitis ,Brain ,Callithrix ,marmosets ,neurologic disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,CD ,myelin ,Myelin-Associated Glycoprotein ,chemometric analysis ,Biological Markers ,demyelination ,non invasive measurement ,white matter ,Primates ,diagnostic imaging ,review ,Rodentia ,Experimental ,Th2 Cells ,Animals ,Humans ,Animalia ,human ,Antigens ,Analytical research ,nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,marmoset ,neuropathology ,nonhuman ,Animal ,pattern recognition ,brain injury ,MHC Class II ,Outbred Strains ,Genes ,Chronic Disease ,Disease Models ,Demyelinating Diseases ,Autoimmune - Abstract
Early recognition of whether a product has potential as a new therapy for treating multiple sclerosis (MS) relies upon the quality of the animal models used in the preclinical trials. The promising effects of new treatments in rodent models of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) have rarely been reproduced in patients suffering from MS. EAE in outbred marmoset monkeys, Callithrix jacchus, is a valid new model, and might provide an experimental link between EAE in rodent models and human MS. Using magnetic resonance imaging techniques similar to those used in patients suffering from MS pathological abnormalities in the brain, white matter of the animal can be visualized and quantified. Moreover, NMR spectroscopy, in combination with pattern recognition, offers an advanced uroscopic technique for the identification of biomarkers of inflammatory demyelination.
- Published
- 2004
48. Ageing and central aortic pulse wave analysis. Commentary on 'Is augmentation index a good measure of vascular stiffness in the elderly?' by Fantin et al.
- Author
-
Cameron J. and Cameron J.
- Published
- 2007
49. Efficacy of lifestyle intervention on peak exercise cardiac power output and reserve in premenopausal obese females: A randomised pilot study
- Author
-
Carroll, Sean, Marshall, Paul, Borkoles, Erika, Ingle, Lee, Barker, Diane, Tan, Lip-Bun, Carroll, Sean, Marshall, Paul, Borkoles, Erika, Ingle, Lee, Barker, Diane, and Tan, Lip-Bun
- Abstract
Background: Clinically obese women have a two-fold increased risk for the development of heart failure. Among younger premenopausal females, obesity has been associated with cardiac remodelling and impaired resting systolic and diastolic function. However, few studies have evaluated cardiorespiratory and cardiac responses to maximal exertion among obese premenopausal females. Design: A randomised pilot study was conducted to investigate the effects of a 3-month lifestyle intervention programme on weight management and maximal cardiorespiratory function in healthy clinically obese premenopausal females. Within this study, thirteen selected participants performed both graded and single-stage V. ̇O2peak exercise tests, the latter integrating the non-invasive measurement of cardiac output (CO2 rebreathing method), peak cardiac power output (CPOpeak) and physiological cardiac reserve. Six participants were randomly assigned to 3-months of lifestyle intervention and 7 served as waiting list controls. Results: Trends were evident for improvement in the traditional weight-adjusted V. ̇O2peak (ml kg- 1 min- 1) measure among the lifestyle group compared with a modest reduction in the controls (test for interaction, P = 0.059). CPOpeak showed a modest, non-significant increase in the lifestyle group and tended to decrease in the control (test for interaction, P = 0.166). Physiological cardiac reserve also improved (2.63 ± 0.54 to 2.92 ± 0.43 W) in the lifestyle group and declined (2.69 ± 0.24 to 2.56 ± 0.28 W) in the control group (test for interaction, P = 0.091). V. ̇O2peak (ml min- 1) increased non-significantly on graded maximal exercise in the lifestyle group compared with control. The larger within group changes in the lifestyle group failed to achieve statistical significance (test for interaction, P = 0.131). Conclusions: In the absence of significant weight reduction, clinically obese premenopausal females derived modest benefits in maximal cardiorespiratory capacity
- Published
- 2007
50. Axial loading MRI of the lumbar spine
- Author
-
Manenti, G., Liccardo, G., Sergiacomi, G., Ferrante, L., Giancarlo D'Andrea, Konda, D., Fraioli, B., Schillaci, O., Simonetti, G., and Masala, S.
- Subjects
Male ,lumbar disk hernia ,diagnostic imaging ,recurrent disease ,article ,biomechanics ,clinical article ,clinical trial ,female ,human ,loading test ,low back pain ,lumbar spine ,male ,non invasive measurement ,nuclear magnetic resonance imaging ,spondylolisthesis ,standing ,vertebral canal stenosis ,Female ,Humans ,Intervertebral Disk Displacement ,Low Back Pain ,Lumbar Vertebrae ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Middle Aged ,Myelography ,Spinal Stenosis ,Spondylolisthesis ,Weight-Bearing ,Settore MED/36 - Diagnostica per Immagini e Radioterapia ,Low back pain ,Lumbar spine ,MRI ,Intervertebral Disc Displacement - Abstract
The aim of our study was to evaluate the incoming interrelations between chronic low back pain and biomechanical changes of the lumbar spine, using an MRI-compatible axial-loading device mimicking the standing position.Fifty consecutive patients (28 males and 22 females), with both chronic low pack pain and recurrent painful blockages, were selected and studied using a 1.5 T Gyroscan Intera Philips MRI unit (Philips, Best, Holland) and a dedicated axial loading apparatus (MIKAI manufacturing, Genoa, Italy).After loading, no significant modifications occurred in ten patients (20%), a spinal stenosis was seen in 18 patients (45%), an increase in the discal protrusions or hernias was detected in 8 patients (20%) and a significant accentuation of the spondylolisthesis was observed in 6 patients (15%).Axial loading MRI provides valuable information for specific non-invasive or operative management of low back pain.
- Published
- 2003
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