Association between endometritis and urocystitis in culled sows

2002 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 413-423 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Biksi ◽  
N. Takács ◽  
F. Vetési ◽  

Slaughterhouse sampling and examination of urogenital tracts of 499 sows and gilts culled for reproductive reasons from 21 Hungarian herds were performed over a 6-year period. The aim was to estimate the prevalence of different urogenital tract lesions, and to provide sensitivity and specificity estimates for macroscopic and bacteriological examinations in the diagnosis of urocystitis and endometritis. Furthermore, the association between endometritis and urocystitis was assessed. The prevalence of main lesions of the urogenital tract was similar to that reported in other studies. The 'sensitivity' of macroscopic and bacteriological methods was determined statistically by taking histopathology as the 'Gold Standard'. As a result, the 'sensitivity' of macroscopic methods for the diagnosis of endometritis and urocystitis was ≤ 18.1% and 47.9%, respectively, while the 'sensitivity' of bacteriology for the diagnosis of the same conditions was ≤ 31.8% and 63.0%, respectively. The presumed positive association between urocystitis and endometritis was confirmed; it was not confounded by parity. Animals affected by urocystitis had a 3.5 times higher odds to simultaneously have endometritis than animals without urocystitis.

2017 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zeynep Cetiner-Alpay ◽  
Fatma Kulali ◽  
Aslihan Semiz-Oysu ◽  
Yasar Bukte ◽  
Kamil Ozdil

Background: Although endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is accepted as the gold standard, there is a place for magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) in the diagnosis of obstructive biliary disorders.Aim: To compare the findings of MRCP with ERCP in patients with obstructive biliary disorders and to investigate the diagnostic efficacy of MRCP combined with DWI.Study design: Retrospective, analytic, cross-sectional study.Methods: The MRCP images of 126 patients who underwent both MRCP and ERCP owing to biliary obstruction were reviewed. Nine patients were excluded because of incomplete diagnostic workup or a long period (>3 months) between MRCP and ERCP. Ninety-two patients underwent DWI, which was also evaluated. The sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of MRCP and DWI were analysed.Results: The sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of MRCP according to ERCP results as the gold standard was 97%, 71% and 93% for assessment of biliary dilatation; 100%, 94.7% and 97.5% for the diagnosis of choledocholithiasis; 93.7%, 100% and 99% for the identification of benign strictures; 100%, 100% and 100% for the diagnosis of malignant tumours; and 100%, 100% and 100% for the detection of complicated hydatid cysts; respectively. The sensitivity and specificity of DWI for the diagnosis of malignant tumour was 100%. In the detection of choledocholithiasis, the sensitivity and specificity of DWI was 70.8% and 100%.Conclusions: MRCP is an alternative, non-invasive, diagnostic modality, comparable with ERCP for the evaluation of pancreaticobiliary diseases. DWI can be helpful for diagnosis of choledocholithiasis and tumours.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 86 (5) ◽  
pp. 805-806
Author(s):  
ALLAN R. DE JONG ◽  
MIMI ROSE

In Reply.— We thank Dr Smith for his interesting perspective regarding screening for child abuse. We had hoped our article would help physicians focus on the verbal evidence of abuse and show how insensitive the physical evidence is in predicting which child had been abused sexually. To apply the principles of sensitivity and specificity to the assessment of child abuse or sexual abuse, we must have a gold standard which characterizes these problems. Neither a child protective services decision nor a legal determination of "no proven abuse" can be used as a gold standard, unless we can accept a "gold standard" made of iron pyrite.


2009 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 14-16
Author(s):  
Mesbah Uddin Ahmed ◽  
Md Akram Hossain ◽  
AKM Shamsuzzaman ◽  
Md Murshed Alam ◽  
Abdul Hossain Khan ◽  
...  

The study was conducted to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of Immunochromatographic test (ICT) for antigen, using microscopy as the "gold standard" method for diagnosis of malaria. A total of 98 clinically suspected malaria patients and another 30 age and sex-matched healthy controls were included in this study. Thick and thin films were also prepared and examined under microscope as well as Immunochromatographic test (ICT) was performed for malaria antigen. Sensitivity and specificity of ICT for antigen were 93.22% and 94.87% respectively. Keywords: Detection of malaria antigen, Immunochromatographic test   doi: 10.3329/bjmm.v3i1.2965 Bangladesh J Med Microbiol 2009; 03 (01): 14-16


2012 ◽  
Vol 19 (04) ◽  
pp. 436-441
Author(s):  
ASMA AFZAL KIANI ◽  
RANA HASSAN JAVAID ◽  
ABDUL GHAFFAR ◽  
Shamrez Khan

Objective: To evaluate the validity of ultrasonography in patients who have obstructive jaundice. Design: Descriptive study.Place and duration of study: The study was carried out from September 2006 to May 2008 in department of Radiology Combined MilitaryHospital Quetta. Patients and Methods: A total of 30 patients; 14 male and 16 female underwent operation for obstructive jaundice. All of themhad preoperative ultrasonography. The site and nature of biliary obstruction were noted and the accuracy was determined with per-operativefindings / histological diagnosis as gold standard. Results: The cause of obstructive jaundice identified by ultrasonography with reasonablesensitivity of 90% and specificity of 90% for choledocholithiasis and sensitivity of 55.5% and specificity of 95.2% for pancreatic head tumours.Conclusions: Ultrasonography should be the first and best initial imaging procedure in patients who have obstructive jaundice and showsreasonable sensitivity and specificity to identify causes of obstruction in obstructive jaundice.


Author(s):  
Firoozeh Ahmadi ◽  
Farnaz Akhbari ◽  
Fatemeh Niknejad ◽  
Hadieh Haghighi ◽  
Zahra Ghahremani ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Introduction Two of the most frequent procedures performed on infertile women are two-dimensional ultrasound (2DUS) and three-dimensional ultrasound (3DUS). Hysteroscopy is considered as the gold standard for evaluation of acquired endometrial lesions in infertile women; however, 3DUS is used as a noninvasive, less expensive, and reliable assessment method for evaluation of the intrauterine lesions in infertile women. We aimed to compare the diagnostic efficiency between 3DUS and hysteroscopy in the detection of lesions (polyps, submucous leiomyoma, and synechiae) in infertile women. Materials and methods In this prospective observational study, infertile women (n = 155) with indication of hysteroscopy were scheduled to undergo 3DUS prior to hysteroscopy from September 2010 to 2011. Women with suspected congenital uterine anomalies were excluded. The sensitivity and specificity values of 3DUS were compared with those of hysteroscopy. Hysteroscopy was used as the gold standard for diagnosis of intrauterine lesions in infertile women. Results Of the 155 women, 50 were found to have an intracavitary abnormality, 36 had polyps, 12 had myomas, and 7 had synechiae on hysteroscopic findings. Examination with 3DUS in the diagnosis of intrauterine lesions reached an accuracy of 94%, and 92.15 and 96.9% of sensitivity and specificity respectively. Positive predictive value (PPV) was 83.9%, and a negative predictive value (NPV) was 91.3% (LR+ = 10.75, LR+ = 0.065). Conclusion According to our results, 3DUS has a reliable diagnostic accuracy for intrauterine lesions, and it may limit unnecessary hysteroscopy in patients with normal results. How to cite this article Ahmadi F, Haghighi H, Ghahremani Z, Niknejad F, Akhbari F, Ramezanali F, Chehrazi M. Diagnostic Accuracy of Three-dimensional Ultrasonography in Detection of Endometrial Lesions compared with Hysteroscopy in Infertile Women. Donald School J Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol 2016;10(4):393-397.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Mohamed Nashnoush

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a fatal type of cancer with an increasing incidence rate in North America. The only curative procedure of this disease is the Whipple procedure, which is restricted only to those that received an early diagnosis. The remainder of the patients are informed of a dismal prognosis and undergo palliative care through systemic chemotherapy. Multiple modalities are involved in the staging and diagnosis of this disease. However, there seems to be a controversy regarding a gold standard or whether a gold standard exists. Additionally, there are various emerging techniques that warrant heightened sensitivity and specificity in their designated modalities. Transabdominal ultrasound that is most commonly used as the first line of imaging for patients with epigastric pain is found to be virtually insensitive to neoplasms that have a size of 2 cm or less, limiting its application. However, sonographers could resort to contrasts and elastography to increase the conspicuity of the neoplasms. Moreover, endoscopic ultrasound has shown to be a promising imaging modality with an unprecedented degree of sensitivity to tumors with a diameter less than 1.5 cm. The sensitivity and specificity values of MDCT, MRI, and PET were found to be comparable. The main conclusions consist of the fact that EUS is a highly sensitive test that should be accompanied by MRI, MDCT, PET, or TUS to increase its specificity. Lastly, empathetic communication is vital not only for patient comfort but also to improve the quality of the imaging assessment.


Stroke ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Zahneisen ◽  
Matus Straka ◽  
Shalini Bammer ◽  
Greg Albers ◽  
Roland Bammer

Introduction: Ruling out hemorrhage (stroke or traumatic) prior to administration of thrombolytics is critical for Code Strokes. A triage software that identifies hemorrhages on head CTs and alerts radiologists would help to streamline patient care and increase diagnostic confidence and patient safety. ML approach: We trained a deep convolutional network with a hybrid 3D/2D architecture on unenhanced head CTs of 805 patients. Our training dataset comprised 348 positive hemorrhage cases (IPH=245, SAH=67, Sub/Epi-dural=70, IVH=83) (128 female) and 457 normal controls (217 female). Lesion outlines were drawn by experts and stored as binary masks that were used as ground truth data during the training phase (random 80/20 train/test split). Diagnostic sensitivity and specificity were defined on a per patient study level, i.e. a single, binary decision for presence/absence of a hemorrhage on a patient’s CT scan. Final validation was performed in 380 patients (167 positive). Tool: The hemorrhage detection module was prototyped in Python/Keras. It runs on a local LINUX server (4 CPUs, no GPUs) and is embedded in a larger image processing platform dedicated to stroke. Results: Processing time for a standard whole brain CT study (3-5mm slices) was around 2min. Upon completion, an instant notification (by email and/or mobile app) was sent to users to alert them about the suspected presence of a hemorrhage. Relative to neuroradiologist gold standard reads the algorithm’s sensitivity and specificity is 90.4% and 92.5% (95% CI: 85%-94% for both). Detection of acute intracranial hemorrhage can be automatized by deploying deep learning. It yielded very high sensitivity/specificity when compared to gold standard reads by a neuroradiologist. Volumes as small as 0.5mL could be detected reliably in the test dataset. The software can be deployed in busy practices to prioritize worklists and alert health care professionals to speed up therapeutic decision processes and interventions.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 117 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Adrian Rossi ◽  
Eric A. Singer ◽  
Dragan J. Golijanin ◽  
Rebeca D. Monk ◽  
Erdal Erturk ◽  
...  

Objectives: The gold standard for determining likelihood of calcium oxalate(CaOx) and calcium phosphate (CaPhos) stone formation in urine is supersaturationof CaOx and CaPhos. Our objective was to investigate whether traditionalmeasurement of total calcium, oxalate and phosphate in a 24-hour urinecollection is sufficiently sensitive and specific for detecting elevated supersaturationto preclude the more expensive supersaturation test.Methods: We performed a retrospective review of 150 consecutive patients withnephrolithiasis who underwent measurement of CaOx supersaturation (CaOxSS)and CaPhos supersaturation (CaPhosSS), as well as total calcium, oxalate andphosphate in a 24-hour urine collection. We used various cut-off values to determinesensitivity and specificity of 24-hour urine measurements for detectingelevated CaOxSS and CaPhosSS.Results: In men and women, the sensitivity of 24-hour calcium for detectingelevated CaOxSS was 71% and 79%, respectively; for oxalate, sensitivity was59% and 36%, respectively. In men and women, the sensitivity of 24-hour calciumfor detecting elevated CaPhosSS was 74% and 88%, respectively; for phosphate,sensitivity was 57% and 8%, respectively. In men and women, the specificityof 24-hour calcium for detecting elevated CaOxSS was 55% and 48%,respectively; it was 60% for detecting elevated CaPhosSS in both men andwomen.Conclusion: Traditional 24-hour urine analysis is sensitive, but not specific, fordetecting elevated CaOxSS and CaPhosSS. Most patients with abnormal 24-hour urine analysis have normal supersaturation, and treatment decisions basedon traditional urine analysis would lead to overtreatment in these patients.


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