581 research outputs found

    3.0 Tesla magnetic resonance imaging: A new standard in liver imaging?

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    An ever-increasing number of 3.0 Tesla (T) magnets are installed worldwide. Moving from the standard of 1.5 T to higher field strength implies a number of potential advantage and drawbacks, requiring careful optimization of imaging protocols or implementation of novel hardware components. Clinical practice and literature review suggest that state-of-the-art 3.0 T is equivalent to 1.5 T in the assessment of focal liver lesions and diffuse liver disease. Therefore, further technical improvements are needed in order to fully exploit the potential of higher field strength

    An information-oriented paradigm in evaluating accuracy and agreement in radiology

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    The goal of any radiological diagnostic process is to gain information about the patient's status. However, the mathematical notion of information is usually not adopted to measure the performance of a diagnostic test or the agreement among readers in providing a certain diagnosis. Indeed, commonly used metrics for assessing diagnostic accuracy (e.g., sensitivity and specificity) or inter-reader agreement (Cohen [Formula: see text] statistics) use confusion matrices containing the number of true- and false positives/negatives results of a test, or the number of concordant/discordant categorizations, respectively, thus lacking proper information content. We present a methodological paradigm, based on Shannon's information theory, aiming to measure both accuracy and agreement in diagnostic radiology. This approach models the information flow as a "diagnostic channel" connecting the state of the patient's disease and the radiologist or, in the case of agreement analysis, as an "agreement channel" linking two or more radiologists evaluating the same set of images. For both cases, we proposed some measures, derived from Shannon's mutual information, which can represent an alternative way to express diagnostic accuracy and agreement in radiology.Key points• Diagnostic processes can be modeled with information theory (IT).• IT metrics of diagnostic accuracy are independent from disease prevalence.• IT metrics of inter-reader agreements can overcome Cohen κ pitfalls

    Magnetic resonance cholangiography in the assessment and management of biliary complications after OLT.

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    Despite advances in patient and graft management, biliary complications (BC) still represent a challenge both in the early and delayed period after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). Because of unspecific clinical presentation, imaging is often mandatory in order to diagnose BC. Among imaging modalities, magnetic resonance cholangiography (MRC) has gained widespread acceptance as a tool to represent the reconstructed biliary tree noninvasively, using both the conventional technique (based on heavily T2-weighted sequences) and contrast-enhanced MRC (based on the acquisition of T1-weighted sequences after the administration of hepatobiliary contrast agents). On this basis, MRC is generally indicated to: (1) avoid unnecessary procedures of direct cholangiography in patients with a negative examination and/or identify alternative complications; and (2) provide a road map for interventional procedures or surgery. As illustrated in the review, MRC is accurate in the diagnosis of different types of biliary complications, including anastomotic strictures, non-anastomotic strictures, leakage and stones

    Egemonia, dittatura del proletariato, democrazia radicale. Alcune note a partire da una rilettura di “Hegemony and Socialist Strategy”

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    L’articolo parte, di un dossier su Gramsci e Althusser, si sofferma sulla rilettura di un celebre testo di Ernesto Laclau e Chantal Mouffe, ricercandone le tracce gramsciane e althusseriane. Un particolare rilevo è dato ai concetti di egemonia e democrazia radicale in relazione alla difesa del concetto di dittatura del proletariato operata da Louis Althusser (ed Étienne Balibar) nella seconda metà degli anni Settanta

    Evolution of prostate MRI: from multiparametric standard to less-is-better and different-is better strategies

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    Multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) has become the standard of care to achieve accurate and reproducible diagnosis of prostate cancer. However, mpMRI is quite demanding in terms of technical rigour, patient's tolerability and safety, expertise in interpretation, and costs. This paper reviews the main technical strategies proposed as less-is-better solutions for clinical practice (non-contrast biparametric MRI, reduction of acquisition time, abbreviated protocols, computer-aided diagnosis systems), discussing them in the light of the available evidence and of the concurrent evolution of Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System (PI-RADS). We also summarised research results on those advanced techniques representing an alternative different-is-better line of the still ongoing evolution of prostate MRI (quantitative diffusion-weighted imaging, quantitative dynamic contrast enhancement, intravoxel incoherent motion, diffusion tensor imaging, diffusional kurtosis imaging, restriction spectrum imaging, radiomics analysis, hybrid positron emission tomography/MRI)

    Metodi numerici per il calcolo del Pagerank

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    La mia tesi si occupa di descrivere, analizzare e confrontare alcuni tra i metodi più importanti per il calcolo del vettore di Pagerank, il cui scopo è classificare in ordine di importanza grandi quantità di pagine web. Per risolvere il problema agli autovalori associato, mettiamo a confronto il metodo delle potenze, una sua modifica estrapolativa, che ne accelera la velocità di convergenza, e il metodo di Arnoldi 'raffinato', che esegue performance migliori per valori del parametro del modello molto vicini a 1

    Abdominal cross-sectional imaging of the associating liver partition and portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy procedure

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    Associating liver partition and portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy (ALPPS) is a recently introduced technique aimed to perform two-stage hepatectomy in patients with a variety of primary or secondary neoplastic lesions. ALPSS is based on a preliminary liver resection associated with ligation of the portal branch directed to the diseased hemiliver (DH), followed by hepatectomy after an interval of time in which the future liver remnant (FLR) hypertrophied adequately (partly because of preserved arterialization of the DH). Multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) play a pivotal role in patients\u2019 selection and FLR assessment before and after the procedure, as well as in monitoring early and late complications, as we aim to review in this paper. Moreover, we illustrate main abdominal MDCT and MRI findings related to ALPPS
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