Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 2 de 2
Filtrar
Mais filtros

Base de dados
Ano de publicação
Tipo de documento
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Risk Manag Healthc Policy ; 16: 401-414, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36941927

RESUMO

Purpose: To evaluate the impact of using computational data management resources and analytical software on radiation doses in mammography and radiography during the COVID-19 pandemic, develop departmental diagnostic reference levels (DRLs), and describe achievable doses (ADs) for mammography and radiography based on measured dose parameters. Patients and Methods: This ambispective cohort study enrolled 795 and 12,115 patients who underwent mammography and radiography, respectively, at the King Fahd Hospital of the University, Al-Khobar City, Saudi Arabia between May 25 and November 4, 2021. Demographic data were acquired from patients' electronic medical charts. Data on mammographic and radiographic dose determinants were acquired from the data management software. Based on the time when the data management software was operational in the institute, the study was divided into the pre-implementation and post-implementation phases. Continuous and categorical variables were compared between the two phases using an unpaired t-test and the chi-square test. Results: The median accumulated average glandular dose (AGD; a mammographic dose determinant) in the post-implementation phase was three-fold higher than that in the pre-implementation phase. The average mammographic exposure time in the post-implementation phase was 16.3 ms shorter than that in the pre-implementation phase. Furthermore, the median values of the dose area product ([DAP], a radiographic dose determinant) were 9.72 and 19.4 cGycm2 in the pre-implementation and post-implementation phases, respectively. Conclusion: Although the data management software used in this study helped reduce the radiation exposure time by 16.3 ms in mammography, its impact on the mean accumulated AGD was unfavorable. Similarly, radiographic exposure indices, including DAP, tube voltage, tube current, and exposure time, were not significantly different after the data management software was implemented. Close monitoring of patient radiation doses in mammography and radiography, and dose reduction will become possible if imaging facilities use DRLs and ADs via automated systems.

2.
Pediatr Gastroenterol Hepatol Nutr ; 22(4): 400-406, 2019 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31338316

RESUMO

We report a 12-month-old female infant who had a history of neonatal sepsis with liver micro-abscesses that resolved with intravenous antibiotics during neonatal period. During her neonatal admission period, no umbilical vein catheter was inserted. Also, she did not undergo any abdominal surgeries or had a postnatal history of necrotizing enterocolitis. However, the child developed upper gastrointestinal bleeding in form of hematemesis and melena secondary to esophageal varices at the age of 12 months with an extra-hepatic portal vein obstruction with cavernous transformation and portal hypertension subsequently. The child underwent a successful endoscopic injection sclerotherapy. She is now 20-month-old and has portal hypertension but otherwise asymptomatic. We are proposing the possibility of a delayed-onset portal hypertension as a complication of liver abscess and neonatal sepsis.

SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA