routine clinical imaging
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret Moore ◽  
Celine Gillebert ◽  
Nele Demeyere

Visuospatial neglect is a heterogenous syndrome which can occur following damage to either right or left hemisphere areas. This study employs voxel-lesion symptom mapping to identify the neural correlates of left and right egocentric and allocentric neglect in a large acute stroke cohort.A cohort of 446 acute stroke survivors (age = 26-95, 44% female) completed neuropsychological neglect assessment and routine clinical imaging. Similar to previous investigations, left egocentric and left allocentric neglect were associated with damage to distinct clusters of voxels within the posterior parietal and temporo-parietal junction areas. Unlike previous investigations, right egocentric neglect was found to most strongly associated with damage to more posterior voxels within left occipital cortical areas. Right allocentric neglect was found to be most strongly associated with damage to the anterior limb of the left internal capsule. Interestingly, the right hemisphere homologues of the areas implicated in right-lateralised neglect were not overlapping with those associated with left neglect impairment. This dissociation was present across both egocentric and allocentric neglect impairment. The results of this investigation suggest that right egocentric/allocentric neglect should not be characterised as a consequence of damage to left-hemisphere homologues of the right hemisphere attentional systems. These findings support the characterisation of visuospatial neglect as a heterogenous cluster of impairments rather than a unitary syndrome and provide novel insight into the neural correlates of spatial attention.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew T MacLean ◽  
Qasim Jehangir ◽  
Marijana Vujkovic ◽  
Yi-An Ko ◽  
Harold Litt ◽  
...  

Objective The objective was to develop a fully automated algorithm for abdominal fat segmentation and deploy this method at scale and associated with diagnoses in an academic biobank. Materials and Methods We built a fully automated image curation and labeling technique using deep learning and distributive computing to identify subcutaneous and visceral abdominal fat compartments from 47,587 CT scans in 13,422 patients in the Penn Medicine Biobank (PMBB). A classification network identified the inferior and superior borders of the abdomen, and a segmentation network differentiated visceral and subcutaneous fat. Following technical evaluation of our method, we conducted studies to validate known relationships with adiposity. Results When compared with 100 manually annotated cases, the classification network was on average within one 5 mm slice for both the superior (0.3±0.6 slices) and inferior (0.7±0.6 slices) borders. The segmentation network also demonstrated excellent performance with interclass correlation coefficients of 0.99 (p<2e-16) for subcutaneous and 0.99 (p<2e-16) for visceral fat on 100 testing cases. We performed integrative analyses of abdominal fat with the phenome extracted from the electronic health record and found highly significant associations with diabetes mellitus, hypertension, renal failure, among other phenotypes. Conclusion This work presents a fully automated and highly accurate method for the quantification of abdominal fat that can be applied to routine clinical imaging studies to fuel translation scientific discovery.


2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (6) ◽  
pp. E12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandip S. Panesar ◽  
Michael Magnetta ◽  
Debraj Mukherjee ◽  
Kumar Abhinav ◽  
Barton F. Branstetter ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVEAdvances in 3-dimensional (3D) printing technology permit the rapid creation of detailed anatomical models. Integration of this technology into neurosurgical practice is still in its nascence, however. One potential application is to create models depicting neurosurgical pathology. The goal of this study was to assess the clinical value of patient-specific 3D printed models for neurosurgical planning and education.METHODSThe authors created life-sized, patient-specific models for 4 preoperative cases. Three of the cases involved adults (2 patients with petroclival meningioma and 1 with trigeminal neuralgia) and the remaining case involved a pediatric patient with craniopharyngioma. Models were derived from routine clinical imaging sequences and manufactured using commercially available software and hardware.RESULTSLife-sized, 3D printed models depicting bony, vascular, and neural pathology relevant to each case were successfully manufactured. A variety of commercially available software and hardware were used to create and print each model from radiological sequences. The models for the adult cases were printed in separate pieces, which had to be painted by hand, and could be disassembled for detailed study, while the model for the pediatric case was printed as a single piece in separate-colored resins and could not be disassembled for study. Two of the models were used for patient education, and all were used for presurgical planning by the surgeon.CONCLUSIONSPatient-specific 3D printed models are useful to neurosurgical practice. They may be used as a visualization aid for surgeons and patients, or for education of trainees.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi175-vi175
Author(s):  
Hyunsoo Yoon ◽  
Andrea Hawkins-Daarud ◽  
Akshay Save ◽  
Kyle Singleton ◽  
Kamala Clark-Swanson ◽  
...  

Abstract Recurrent glioblastoma is challenging to distinguish from so called “treatment effect” on routine clinical imaging. Further, within tumor heterogeneity reveals that some regions can be histologically dominated by tumor progression whilst others can be dominated by secondary effects of treatment response. Apparent tumor progression on MRI can be very difficult to manage clinically as it is unclear the degree to which the imaging changes are actually tumor progression vs response to treatment (including inflammatory response and necrosis). In this analysis, we study a unique cohort of patients for whom image localized-biopsies reveal heterogeneity in response vs progression. Our dataset included 70 biopsy samples from 32 patients with GBM each histolopatholgically characterized for tumor abundance vs immune infiltrate. Six multiparametric MRI contrasts were available, including T1, T1gd, T2, FLAIR, SWI, and ADC. Images were co-registered. Radiomic (statistical + texture) features were extracted from the region of six image contrasts locally matched with each biopsy sample. Machine learning models were built to predict each biomarker using radiomic features. Leave-one-out cross validation was used to evaluate the prediction accuracy. Radiomic features were found to be informative to the prediction of biomarkers. ANOVA tests show significant improvement of using radiomic features compared with the null model. The prediction accuracy was higher when considering the biomarkers on a binary scale using the median as the cutoff than on a numerical scale. Spatially-informed radiomics models for tumor progression vs treatment effect are possible and can play an instrumental role in navigating confounding imaging changed common during treatment progression.


Author(s):  
Janis Spigulis

Optical tissue imaging has several advantages over the routine clinical imaging methods, including non-invasiveness (does not change the structure of tissues), remote operation (avoids infection) and ability to quantify the tissue condition by means of specific image parameters. Dermatologists and other skin experts need compact (preferably pocket-size), self-sustained and easy-to-use imaging devices. The operational principles and designs of ten portable in-vivo skin imaging prototypes developed at the Biophotonics Laboratory of Institute of Atomic Physics and Spectroscopy, University of Latvia during the recent five years are presented in this paper. Four groups of imaging devices are considered. Multi-spectral imagers offer possibilities for distant mapping of specific skin parameters, so facilitating better diagnostics of skin malformations. Autofluorescence intensity and photobleaching rate imagers show a promising potential for skin tumor identification and margin delineation. Photoplethysmography video-imagers ensure remote detection of cutaneous blood pulsations and can provide real-time information on cardiovascular parameters and anesthesia efficiency. Multimodal skin imagers perform several of the above-mentioned functions by taking a number of spectral and video images with the same image sensor. Design details of the developed prototypes and results of clinical tests illustrating their functionality are presented and discussed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 46 (13) ◽  
pp. 1804-1812 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jill M. Stein ◽  
Laura L. Walkup ◽  
Alan S. Brody ◽  
Robert J. Fleck ◽  
Jason C. Woods

2015 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 725-737 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rohit S. Loomba ◽  
Andrew N. Pelech ◽  
Parinda H. Shah ◽  
Robert H. Anderson

AbstractIntroductionHeterotaxy is a unique clinical entity in which lateralisation of the thoraco-abdominal organs is abnormal, typically with isomerism of the bronchial tree and atrial appendages. This study was carried out to determine whether routine clinical imaging such as chest radiographs, angiographic images, and CT/MRI can determine bronchial isomerism, and how sidedness of bronchial isomerism correlates with overall features anticipated in hearts with isomeric atrial appendages.Methods and resultsWe identified 73 patients with heterotaxy, in whom imaging clearly demonstrated the bronchial tree, seen at our institution since 1998. We calculated bronchial angles and lengths using all the available imaging modalities to determine the presence and sidedness of bronchial isomerism. This was then compared with the anticipated presence of isomeric atrial appendages based on the overall clinical findings, as the appendages themselves had not specifically been imaged.The ratio of bronchial lengths revealed bronchial isomerism in all patients, with bronchial angles permitting distinction of right as opposed to left isomerism. We noted discordances between the identified bronchial isomerism and the presumed arrangement of the atrial appendages in nearly 20% of the patients in our cohort.ConclusionRoutine clinical imaging with chest radiographs, angiographic imaging, and CT/MRI can determine the presence of bronchial isomerism in patients with so-called heterotaxy. Right as opposed to left isomerism can be distinguished based on bronchial angles. The finding of bronchial isomerism correlates well, but not totally, with the presumed isomerism of the atrial appendages as predicted from the identified intra-cardiac morphology.


2013 ◽  
Vol 154 (49) ◽  
pp. 1931-1933 ◽  
Author(s):  
Attila Nemes ◽  
Tamás Forster

Recently, there has been much debate about pulmonary hypertension due to modern therapeutic options available. Arterial hypertension is frequently associated with stiffening of a given artery. The aim of the present review is to present clinical imaging methods for the evaluation of the function and stiffness of the pulmonary artery. Orv. Hetil., 154(49), 1931–1933.


2004 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 3593-3606 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margret Schottelius ◽  
Thorsten Poethko ◽  
Michael Herz ◽  
Jean-Claude Reubi ◽  
Horst Kessler ◽  
...  

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