scholarly journals Three-dimensional drip infusion CT cholangiography in patients with suspected obstructive biliary disease: a retrospective analysis of feasibility and adverse reaction to contrast material.

2006 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
A Persson ◽  
N Dahlström ◽  
Ö Smedby ◽  
TB Brismar
2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (8) ◽  
pp. 1589-1592
Author(s):  
Justin George ◽  
Marc Cohen ◽  
Stewart Whitney ◽  
Erin Fennern ◽  
Celia Divino

2017 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 154-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
RAFAEL DENADAI PIGOZZI DA SILVA ◽  
CESAR AUGUSTO RAPOSO-AMARAL ◽  
MARCELO CAMPOS GUIDI ◽  
CASSIO EDUARDO RAPOSO-AMARAL ◽  
CELSO LUIZ BUZZO

ABSTRACT Objective: to present our experience in the surgical treatment of extensive skullcap defects with customized acrylic implants. Methods: we conducted a retrospective analysis of patients with extensive skull defects undergoing acrylic cranioplasties between 2004 and 2013. We carefully selected all patients and classified surgical results based on three scales (craniofacial esthetics, improvement of facial symmetry and need for additional surgery). Results: fifteen patients underwent cranioplasty with intraoperative acrylic implants, whether manually customized (46.67%) or made with prototyped three-dimensional biomodels (53.33%). There were two (13.33%) complications (one infection with implant withdrawal and one seroma). We considered the craniofacial aesthetics excellent (50%), the degree of improvement of craniofacial symmetry satisfactory (57.14%), and the overall mean of surgical results according to the need for new surgeries was 1.5±0.52. Conclusion: cranioplasties of patients with extensive skullcap defects should obey careful and predetermined criteria, both for selection and for the acrylic implant customization method.


2002 ◽  
Vol 282 (5) ◽  
pp. R1267-R1279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael D. Bentley ◽  
Maria C. Ortiz ◽  
Erik L. Ritman ◽  
J. Carlos Romero

Appropriate nephron function is dependent on the intrarenal arrangement of blood vessels. The preferred and primary means to study the architecture of intrarenal circulation has been by filling it with opaque substances such as india ink, radio-opaque contrast material, or various polymers for study by light or scanning electron microscopy. With such methodologies, superficial vessels may obscure deep vessels and little quantitative information may be obtained. Serial-section microtomy has not been practical because of problems relating to alignment and registration of adjacent sections, lost sections, and preparation time and effort. Microcomputed tomography (micro-CT) overcomes such limitations and provides a means to study the three-dimensional architecture of filled vessels within an intact rodent kidney and to obtain more quantitative information. As an example of micro-CT's capabilities, we review the use of micro-CT to study the alterations in renal microvasculature caused by the development of liver cirrhosis after chronic bile duct ligation. In this example, micro-CT evidence shows a selective decrease in cortical vascular filling in the kidney, with a maintenance of medullary vascular filling. These changes may contribute to the salt and water retention that accompanies cirrhosis. These results indicate that micro-CT is a promising method to evaluate renal vascular architecture in the intact rodent kidney relative to physiological and pathological function.


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