33 research outputs found

    A novel fenestration technique for abdominal aortic dissection membranes using a combination of a needle re-entry catheter and the "cheese-wire" technique

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    This study was designed to demonstrate the applicability of a combined needle-based re-entry catheter and "cheese-wire" technique for fenestration of abdominal aortic dissection membranes

    Diagnosis and therapy of acute hemorrhage in patients with pelvic fractures

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    Within the past 15 years, significant advances in the imaging of multiorgan and complex trauma primarily due to the improvement of cross-sectional imaging have resulted in the optimization of the expedient diagnosis and management of the polytrauma patient. At the forefront, multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) has become the cornerstone of modern emergency departments and trauma centers. In many institutions, MDCT is the de facto diagnostic tool upon trauma activation. In the setting of pelvic imaging, MDCT (with its high spatial resolution and sensitivity as well as short acquisition times) allows for rapid identification and assessment of pelvic hemorrhage leading to faster triage and definitive management. In trauma centers throughout the world, angiography and minimally invasive catheter-based embolization techniques performed by interventional radiologists have become the standard of care for patients with acute pelvic trauma and related multiorgan hemorrhage. In an interdisciplinary setting, embolization may be performed either alone or as an adjunct procedure with open or closed reduction and stabilization techniques. A team-based approach involving multiple disciplines (e.g., radiology, traumatology, orthopedic surgery, intensive care medicine) is crucial to monitor and treat the actively bleeding patient appropriately

    Image fusion for intraoperative control of axis in long bone fracture treatment

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    Abstract : Background: : The incidence of malalignment after long bone fracture fixation is reported to be between 0 and 37%. Modern fracture treatment strives towards closed reduction and minimally invasive fracture fixation, thus not exposing the fracture itself. Hence, the occurrence of malalignment might even be higher than previously reported and quite frequently even necessitate secondary operations. Minimally invasive techniques rely heavily on intraoperative fluoroscopy. However, fluoroscopic images have small cross-sections and consequently limit intraoperative visualization of the limb to individual segments only. Under these circumstances, correct alignment of fragments in long bone fractures is often compromised. Methods: : We present a new software prototype using an absolute reference panel to concatenate two or more discontinuous fluoroscopic images into one single panoramic picture. The reference panel is placed on the operating table under the limb to be examined. Prior to digital picture fusion, the software applies non-linear distortion, picture scaling and de-rotation algorithms to the fluoroscopic images. Results: : The presented software runs on a notebook and processes images generated by a commercially available mobile C-arm within seconds. The reliability of alignment in the panorama picture is found to be numerically adequate and the technique appropriate for clinical use. Conclusion: : This method aims to improve the intraoperative visualization in minimally invasive osteosynthesis and therefore diminish malalignments in long bone fracture treatmen

    Pedal angiography in peripheral arterial occlusive disease : first-pass i.v. contrast-enhanced MR angiography with blood pool contrast medium versus intraarterial digital subtraction angiography

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    OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to prospectively evaluate first-pass i.v. gadofosveset-enhanced MR angiography in patients with peripheral arterial occlusive disease for visualization of the pedal arteries and stenosis or occlusion of those arteries with intraarterial digital subtraction angiography as the reference standard. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Twenty patients with peripheral arterial occlusive disease (nine women, 11 men; age-range 58-83 years) were prospectively enrolled. Gadofosveset first-pass contrast-enhanced MR angiography was performed with a 1.5-T system, a dedicated foot coil, and cuff compression to the calf. Arterial segments were assessed for degree of arterial stenosis, arterial visibility, diagnostic utility, and venous contamination. Detection of vessel stenosis or occlusion was evaluated in comparison with findings at digital subtraction angiography. The unpaired Student's t test was used to test arterial visibility with the two techniques. RESULTS: First-pass MR angiography with gadofosveset had good diagnostic utility in 83.9% of all segments and no venous contamination in 96.8% of all segments. There was no difference between the performance of intraarterial digital subtraction angiography and that of i.v. contrast-enhanced MR angiography in arterial visibility overall (p = 0.245) or in subgroup analysis of surgical arterial bypass targets (p = 0.202). The overall sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of i.v. gadofosveset-enhanced MR angiography for characterization of clinically significant stenosis and occlusion were 91.4%, 96.1%, and 93.9%. In the subgroup analysis, the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were 85.5%, 96.5%, and 92.1%. CONCLUSION: Gadofosveset-enhanced MR angiography of the pedal arteries in patients with peripheral arterial occlusive disease has arterial visibility equal to that of digital subtraction angiography and facilitates depiction of clinically significant stenosis and occlusion

    In search of benchmarking for mortality following multiple trauma : a Swiss trauma center experience

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    BACKGROUND: The manifestations associated with non-survival after multiple trauma may vary importantly between countries and institutions. The aim of the present study was to assess the quality of performance by comparing actual mortality rates to the literature. METHODS: The study involved evaluation of a prospective consecutive multiple trauma cohort (injury severity score, ISS 0.001 each) functioned as major independent prognostic parameters of both 24 h and 30-day mortality. Various TRISS versions hardly differed in their precision (area under the curve [AUC] 0.83-0.84), but they did differ considerably in their level of requirement, with the TRISS using newer National Trauma Data Bank coefficients (NTDB-TRISS) offering the highest target benchmark (predicted mortality 13%, Z value -5.7) in the prediction of 30-day mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Because of the current lack of a single, internationally accepted scoring system for the prediction of mortality after multiple trauma, the comparison of outcomes between medical centers remains unreliable. To achieve effective quality control, a practical benchmarking model, such as the TRISS-NTDB, should be used worldwide

    99mTc-DPD-SPECT/CT predicts the outcome of imaging-guided diagnostic anaesthetic injections : a prospective cohort study

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    We hypothesized that bone SPECT combined with multiplanar reconstructed CT can identify and target the pain-inducing focus in the foot and can be used to successfully guide anaesthetic infiltrations. Therefore we prospectively investigated feasibility and predictive value of bone SPECT/CT for image guided diagnostic infiltrations in patients with chronic foot pain

    Feasibility of real-time magnetic resonance-guided angioplasty and stenting of renal arteries in vitro and in Swine, using a new polyetheretherketone-based magnetic resonance-compatible guidewire

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    Demonstrate the usability of a new polyetheretherketone (PEEK)-based MR-compatible guidewire for renal artery catheterization, angioplasty, and stenting under MR-guidance using MR-visible markers, in vitro and in vivo
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