22 research outputs found

    A new, easy, fast, and safe method for CT-guided sacroplasty

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    Sacral insufficiency fractures constitute clinical challenges because no effective surgical techniques can be applied and only a conservative treatment is currently performed. Sacroplasty is increasingly used to treat sacral insufficiency fractures. A computed tomography (CT)-guided technique concerning the placement of the sacroplasty needles within the sacral wings by using a laser alignment light guidance associated with a CT gantry tilt in a plane parallel to the sacral bone is presented. This method allowed a fast and precise placement of the needle in and along the sacral wings, thus preventing the use of multiple needles to reach the fracture site

    Outcome of long-axis percutaneous sacroplasty for the treatment of sacral insufficiency fractures

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    Our aim was to assess the clinical outcome of patients who were subjected to long-axis sacroplasty for the treatment of sacral insufficiency fractures. Nineteen patients with unilateral (n = 3) or bilateral (n = 16) sacral fractures were involved. Under local anaesthesia, each patient was subjected to CT-guided sacroplasty using the long-axis approach through a single entry point. An average of 6ml of polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) was delivered along the path of each sacral fracture. For each individual patient, the Visual Analogue pain Scale (VAS) before sacroplasty and at 1, 4, 24 and 48weeks after the procedure was obtained. Furthermore, the use of analgesics (narcotic/non-narcotic) along with the evolution of post-interventional patient mobility before and after sacroplasty was also recorded. The mean pre-procedure VAS was 8 ± 1.9 (range, 2 to 10). This rapidly and significantly (P < 0.001) declined in the first week after the procedure (mean 4 ± 1.4; range, 1 to 7) followed by a gradual and significant (P < 0.001) decrease along the rest of the follow-up period at 4weeks (mean 3 ± 1.1; range, 1 to 5), 24weeks (mean 2.2 ± 1.1; range, 1 to 5) and 48weeks (mean 1.6 ± 1.1; range, 1 to 5). Eleven (58%) patients were under narcotic analgesia before sacroplasty, whereas 8 (42%) patients were using non-narcotics. Corresponding values after the procedure were 2/19 (10%; narcotic, one of them was on reserve) and 10/19 (53%; non-narcotic). The remaining 7 (37%) patients did not address post-procedure analgesic use. The evolution of post-interventional mobility was favourable in the study group as they revealed a significant improvement in their mobility point scale (P < 0.001). Long-axis percutaneous sacroplasty is a suitable, minimally invasive treatment option for patients who present with sacral insufficiency fractures. More studies with larger patient numbers are needed to explore any unrecognised limitations of this therapeutic approac

    CT angiography helps to differentiate acute from chronic carotid occlusion: the "carotid ring sign”

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    Introduction: Currently, there is no reliable method to differentiate acute from chronic carotid occlusion. We propose a novel CTA-based method to differentiate acute from chronic carotid occlusions that could potentially aid clinical management of patients. Methods: We examined 72 patients with 89 spontaneously occluded extracranial internal carotids with CT angiography (CTA). All occlusions were confirmed by another imaging modality and classified as acute (imaging 4weeks), based on circumstantial clinical and radiological evidence. A neuroradiologist and a neurologist blinded to clinical information determined the site of occlusion on axial sections of CTA. They also looked for (a) hypodensity in the carotid artery (thrombus), (b) contrast within the carotid wall (vasa vasorum), (c) the site of the occluded carotid, and (d) the "carotid ring sign” (defined as presence of a and/or b). Results: Of 89 occluded carotids, 24 were excluded because of insufficient circumstantial evidence to determine timing of occlusion, 4 because of insufficient image quality, and 3 because of subacute timing of occlusion. Among the remaining 45 acute and 13 chronic occlusions, inter-rater agreement (kappa) for the site of proximal occlusion was 0.88, 0.45 for distal occlusion, 0.78 for luminal hypodensity, 0.82 for wall contrast, and 0.90 for carotid ring sign. The carotid ring sign had 88.9% sensitivity, 69.2% specificity, and 84.5% accuracy to diagnose acute occlusion. Conclusion: The carotid ring sign helps to differentiate acute from chronic carotid occlusion. If further confirmed, this information may be helpful in studying ischemic symptoms and selecting treatment strategies in patients with carotid occlusion

    Contractile reserve in systemic sclerosis patients as a major predictor of global cardiac impairment and exercise tolerance

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    Several studies have evidenced high prevalence of myocardial systolic and diastolic dysfunction among patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc). Exercise echocardiography has shown a diagnostic and prognostic role in identifying early left ventricular (LV) dysfunction in several myocardial pathological settings. The aim of our study was to evaluate early signs of LV impairment under exercise and their correlation to patient's exercise tolerance. Forty-five patients (age 60.4 ± 10.3 years) with SSc and 20 age and sex comparable controls were enrolled in the study. All patients underwent clinical evaluation, 2D echocardiography associated with Tissue Doppler and speckle tracking to evaluate LV deformation indexes, and an exercise echocardiography to evaluate left ventricle contractile reserve (LVCR) and exercise pulmonary pressures. Finally, a 6-minute walking test (6MWT) to evaluate exercise tolerance was also performed. Compared to controls, SSc patients showed an impaired diastolic function (E/E' 10.9 ± 3.7 vs 8.36 ± 2.01; p < 0.01) associated with larger left atrial dimensions (LAVI 28.4 ± 8.7 vs 19.3 ± 4.6 mL/m2; p < 0.01). During exercise echocardiography, a reduced global longitudinal strain at peak exercise (S-GLS) was highlighted compared to controls (15.7 ± 3.6 vs 18.2 ± 2.2; p = 0.001). A S-GLS cutoff <18 %, identified by ROC analysis, identified SSc patients with a reduced diastolic function, exercise tolerance at the 6MWT and higher pulmonary pressures. Our data show that in SSc patients a reduced LVCR characterizes the patients with a more extensive cardiovascular impairment in terms of LV diastolic function, pulmonary pressures and exercise tolerance. These data underline the importance of exercise echocardiography for the preclinical screening of the LV impairment in this population

    Postmortem computed tomography angiography vs. conventional autopsy: advantages and inconveniences of each method

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    Purpose: Postmortem computed tomography angiography (PMCTA) was introduced into forensic investigations a few years ago. It provides reliable images that can be consulted at any time. Conventional autopsy remains the reference standard for defining the cause of death, but provides only limited possibility of a second examination. This study compares these two procedures and discusses findings that can be detected exclusively using each method. Materials and methods: This retrospective study compared radiological reports from PMCTA to reports from conventional autopsy for 50 forensic autopsy cases. Reported findings from autopsy and PMCTA were extracted and compared to each other. PMCTA was performed using a modified heart-lung machine and the oily contrast agent AngiofilÂź (Fumedica AG, Muri, Switzerland). Results: PMCTA and conventional autopsy would have drawn similar conclusions regarding causes of death. Nearly 60% of all findings were visualized with both techniques. PMCTA demonstrates a higher sensitivity for identifying skeletal and vascular lesions. However, vascular occlusions due to postmortem blood clots could be falsely assumed to be vascular lesions. In contrast, conventional autopsy does not detect all bone fractures or the exact source of bleeding. Conventional autopsy provides important information about organ morphology and remains the only way to diagnose a vital vascular occlusion with certitude. Conclusion: Overall, PMCTA and conventional autopsy provide comparable findings. However, each technique presents advantages and disadvantages for detecting specific findings. To correctly interpret findings and clearly define the indications for PMCTA, these differences must be understoo

    Cerebral aneurysm exclusion by CT angiography based on subarachnoid hemorrhage pattern: a retrospective study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>To identify patients with spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage for whom CT angiography alone can exclude ruptured aneurysms.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>An observational retrospective review was carried out of all consecutive patients with non-traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage who underwent both CT angiography and catheter angiography to exclude an aneurysm. CT angiography negative cases (no aneurysm) were classified according to their CT hemorrhage pattern as "aneurismal", "perimesencephalic" or as "no-hemorrhage."</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Two hundred and forty-one patients were included. A CT angiography aneurysm detection sensitivity and specificity of 96.4% and 96.0% were observed. All 35 cases of perimesencephalic or no-hemorrhage out of 78 CT angiography negatives also had negative angiography findings.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>CT angiography is self-reliant to exclude ruptured aneurysms when either a perimesencephalic hemorrhage or no-hemorrhage pattern is identified on the CT within a week of symptom onset.</p

    Three-dimensional spiral CT of craniofacial malformations in children

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