scholarly journals Measurements of carotid intima media thickness in non-invasive high-frequency ultrasound images: the effect of dynamic range setting

2015 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mario Gaarder ◽  
Therese Seierstad
2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (8) ◽  
pp. 787-791 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raul Moreira Neto ◽  
Jose Geraldo Lopes Ramos ◽  
Edin Medjedovic ◽  
Edin Begic

AbstractObjectivesThe aim of the study was to determine carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT) values in patients who developed and did not develop preeclampsia (PE), and to determine whether CIMT values could be predictors of PE development.MethodsThe study included pregnant women who were examined by regular ultrasound examination at the Materno-Infantil Presidente Vargas Hospital (HMIPV) in Porto Alegre, Brazil, from April 2016 to September 2017. The examinations were performed every three months. Patients were divided into two groups. The first group included patients diagnosed with PE (n=21) and second group included patients who did not have PE (n=199). A high frequency ultrasound device (12 MHz) with a semi-automatic method was used to estimate CIMT.ResultsCIMT was significantly higher in pregnant women with PE than in women without PE (55±0.11 vs. 0.44±0.06, respectively; p<0.001). Using a cut-off value of 0.51 mm, CIMT had a specificity of 77.9% and sensitivity of 81% in the diagnosis of PE. With CIMT ≥0.6 mm, the probability of a patient developing PE was 44.4%; with CIMT >0.42 mm, the probability was only 4.2%.ConclusionsAn increase in CIMT was associated with the onset of PE. CIMT values were significantly higher in patients who develop PE.


Author(s):  
Izelda Maria Carvalho Costa ◽  
Camille Bresolin Pompeu ◽  
Eduardo Botelho Silva Mauad ◽  
Mariana Carvalho Costa ◽  
Vanessa Guimarães de Freitas Lima ◽  
...  

ISRN Nursing ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison P. Porter-Armstrong ◽  
Catherine Adams ◽  
Anne S. Moorhead ◽  
Jeannie Donnelly ◽  
Jane Nixon ◽  
...  

High frequency ultrasound imaging has been reported as a potential method of identifying the suspected tissue damage in patients “at risk” of pressure ulceration. The aim of this study was to explore whether ultrasound images supported the clinical skin assessment in an inpatient population through identification of subcutaneous tissue damage. Skin on the heels and/or sacral coccygeal area of fifty vascular surgery inpatients was assessed clinically by tissue viability nurses and with ultrasound pre operatively and at least every other day until discharge. Images were compared to routine clinical skin assessment outcomes. Qualitative classification of ultrasound images did not match outcomes yielded through the clinical skin assessment. Images corresponding to 16 participants were classified as subgroup 3 damage at the heels (equivalent to grade 2 pressure ulceration); clinical skin assessment rated no heels as greater than grade 1a (blanching erythema). Conversely, all images captured of the sacral coccygeal area were classified as normal; the clinical skin assessment rated two participants as grade 1b (non-blanching erythema). Ultrasound imaging is a potentially useful adjunct to the clinical skin assessment in providing information about the underlying tissue. However, further longitudinal clinical assessment is required to characterise images against actual and “staged” pressure ulceration.


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