6 research outputs found

    Cardiac troponin and skeletal muscle oxygenation in severe post-partum haemorrhage

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    International audienceIntroductionCardiac troponin has been shown to be elevated in one-half of the parturients admitted for post-partum haemorrhage. The purpose of the study was to assess whether increased cardiac troponin was associated with a simultaneous alteration in haemoglobin tissue oxygen saturation in peripheral muscles in post-partum haemorrhage.MethodsTissue haemoglobin oxygen saturation of thenar eminence muscle (StO2) was measured via near-infrared spectroscopy technology. Two sets of StO2 parameters (both isolated baseline and during forearm ischaemia-reperfusion tests) were collected at two time points: upon intensive care unit admission and prior to intensive care unit discharge. Comparisons were performed using Wilcoxon paired tests, and univariate associations were assessed using logistic regression model and Wald tests.ResultsThe 42 studied parturients, admitted for post-partum haemorrhage, had clinical and biological signs of severe blood loss. Initial cardiac troponin I was increased in 24/42 parturients (0.43 ± 0.60 μrg/l). All measured parameters of muscular haemoglobin oxygen saturation, including Srecovery, were also altered at admission and improved together with improved haemodynamics, when bleeding was controlled. Multivariate analysis showed that muscular Srecovery ConclusionsOur study confirmed the high incidence of increased cardiac troponin, and demonstrated the simultaneous impairment in the reserve of oxygen delivery to peripheral muscles in parturients admitted for severe post-partum haemorrhage

    Placental vascularity and resorption delay after conservative management of invasive placenta: MR imaging evaluation

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    International audienceOBJECTIVES:To assess the potential of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in evaluating placental vascularity and predicting placental resorption delay after conservative management of invasive placenta.METHODS:MR examinations of 23 women with conservative management of invasive placenta were reviewed. Twelve women had pelvic embolisation because of postpartum haemorrhage (Group 1) and 11 had no embolisation (Group 2). Comparisons between the two groups were made with respect to the delay for complete placental resorption at follow-up MR imaging and degree of placental vascularity 24 h after delivery on early (30s) and late (180 s) phase of dynamic gadolinium chelate-enhanced MR imaging.RESULTS:The median delay for complete placental resorption in the cohort study was 21.1 weeks (range, 1-111 weeks). In Group 1, the median delay for complete placental resorption was shorter than in Group 2 (17 vs 32 weeks) (P = 0.036). Decreased placental vascularity on the early phase was observed in Group 1 by comparison with Group 2 (P = 0.003). Significant correlation was found between the degree of vascularity on early phase of dynamic MR imaging and the delay for complete placental resorption (r = 0.693; P < 0.001).CONCLUSIONS:MR imaging provides useful information after conservative management of invasive placenta and may help predict delay for complete placental resorption

    Free-breathing diffusion-weighted single-shot echo-planar MR imaging using parallel imaging (GRAPPA 2) and high b value for the detection of primary rectal adenocarcinoma

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    Our objective was to determine the diagnostic accuracy of a free-breathing diffusion-weighted single-shot echo-planar magnetic resonance imaging (FBDW-SSEPI) technique with parallel imaging and high diffusion factor value (b = 1000 s/mm2) in the detection of primary rectal adenocarcinomas. Thirty-one patients (14M and 17F; mean age 67 years) with histopathologically proven primary rectal adenocarcinomas and 31 patients without rectal malignancies (14M and 17F; mean age 63.6 years) were examined with FBDW-SSEPI (repetition time (TR/echo time (TE) 3900/91 ms, gradient strength 45 mT/m, acquisition time 2 min) at 1.5 T using generalized autocalibrating partially parallel acquisitions (GRAPPA, acceleration factor 2) and a b value of 1000 s/mm2. Apparent diffusion coefficients (ADCs) of rectal adenocarcinomas and normal rectal wall were measured. FBDW-SSEPI images were evaluated for tumour detection by 2 readers. Sensitivity, specificity, accuracy and Youden score for rectal adenocarcinoma detection were calculated with their 95% confidence intervals (CI) for ADC value measurement and visual image analysis. Rectal adenocarcinomas had significantly lower ADCs (mean 1.036 × 10−3 ± 0.107 × 10−3 mm2/s; median 1.015 × 10−3 mm2/s; range (0.827–1.239) × 10−3 mm2/s) compared with the rectal wall of control subjects (mean 1.387 × 10−3 ± 0.106 × 10−3 mm2/s; median 1.385 × 10−3 mm2/s; range (1.176–1.612) × 10−3 mm2/s) (p < 0.0001). Using a threshold value ≤ 1.240 × 10−3 mm2/s, all rectal adenocarcinomas were correctly categorized and 100% sensitivity (31/31; 95% CI 95–100%), 94% specificity (31/33; 95% CI 88–100%), 97% accuracy (60/62; 95% CI 92–100%) and Youden index 0.94 were obtained for the diagnosis of rectal adenocarcinoma. FBDW-SSEPI image analysis allowed depiction of all rectal adenocarcinomas but resulted in 2 false-positive findings, yielding 100% sensitivity (31/31; 95% CI 95–100%), 94% specificity (31/33; 95% CI 88–100%), 97% accuracy (60/62; 95% CI 92–100%) and Youden index 0.94 for the diagnosis of primary rectal adenocarcinoma. We can conclude that FBDW-SSEPI using parallel imaging and high b value may be helpful in the detection of primary rectal adenocarcinomas
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