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1.
J Vasc Surg ; 78(5): 1286-1291, 2023 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37527690

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The pedal medial arterial calcification (MAC) score has been associated with risk of major limb amputation in patients with chronic limb-threatening ischemia. This study aimed to validate the pedal MAC scoring system in a multi-institutional analysis to validate its usefulness in limb amputation risk prediction. METHODS: A multi-institution, retrospective study of patients who underwent endovascular or open surgical infrainguinal revascularization for chronic limb-threatening ischemia was performed. MAC scores of 0 to 5 were assigned based on visible calcified arteries on foot X ray then trichotomized (0-1, 2-4, 5) for analysis. The primary outcome was major limb amputation at 6 months. Adjusted Kaplan-Meier models were used to analyze time-to-major amputation across groups. RESULTS: There were 176 patients with 184 affected limbs (mean age, 66 years; 61% male; 60% White), of whom 97% presented with a wound. The MAC score was 0 in 41%, 1 in 9%, 2 in 13%, 3 in 11%, 4 in 13%, and 5 in 13% of the limbs. There were 26 major amputations (14%) and 16 deaths (8.7%) within 6 months. Patients with MAC 5 had a significantly higher risk of major limb amputation than both the 0 to 1 and 2 to 4 groups (P = .001 and P = .044, respectively), and lower overall amputation-free survival (log-rank P = .008). CONCLUSIONS: Pedal MAC score is a reproducible and generalizable measure of inframalleolar arterial disease that can be used with Wound, Ischemia, and foot Infection staging to predict major limb amputation in patients with chronic limb-threatening ischemia.


Subject(s)
Endovascular Procedures , Peripheral Arterial Disease , Humans , Male , Aged , Female , Lower Extremity/blood supply , Chronic Limb-Threatening Ischemia , Limb Salvage/adverse effects , Retrospective Studies , Treatment Outcome , Peripheral Arterial Disease/diagnostic imaging , Peripheral Arterial Disease/surgery , Risk Factors , Amputation, Surgical , Ischemia/diagnostic imaging , Ischemia/etiology , Ischemia/surgery , Endovascular Procedures/adverse effects
2.
J Vasc Interv Radiol ; 34(2): 225-233, 2023 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36306987

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To determine whether fallopian tube embolization with n-butyl-2-cyanoacrylate (nBCA) administered via a microcatheter in a rabbit model was technically feasible and resulted in short-term tubal occlusion. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In 10 female New Zealand white rabbits, the 2 cervices were cannulated using a 5-F catheter and hydrophilic guide wire transvaginally. Salpingography confirmed tubal patency bilaterally. A 2.4-F microcatheter was advanced to the distal fallopian tube, and nBCA/ethiodized oil was administered as the microcatheter was withdrawn to fill the length of the tube. A metallic coil was deployed prior to nBCA administration in half of the fallopian tubes. Rabbits were evaluated for tubal occlusion with salpingography at 1 month, followed by euthanasia and histopathologic analysis. Inflammation and fibrosis were graded from 0 (normal) to 3 (severe). RESULTS: Fallopian tube embolization was technically successful in 17 (85%) of 20 fallopian tubes. Thirteen (76%) of 17 embolized fallopian tubes were occluded at 1 month on salpingography (nBCA only, 7/9; nBCA and coil, 6/8). On histopathologic analysis, direct or indirect evidence of occlusion was observed in 14 (82%) of 17 fallopian tubes. Mild or early fibrosis was observed in 65% of the tubes. The mean inflammation and fibrosis scores for the embolized tubes were 0.62 and 0.94, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: This pilot study demonstrated that embolization of rabbit fallopian tubes using nBCA administered via a microcatheter is technically feasible and results in occlusion of most fallopian tubes in the short term with minimal inflammation. Investigation of efficacy in preventing pregnancy over the long term is warranted.


Subject(s)
Enbucrilate , Fallopian Tubes , Pregnancy , Humans , Rabbits , Female , Animals , Fallopian Tubes/diagnostic imaging , Fallopian Tubes/pathology , Fallopian Tubes/surgery , Feasibility Studies , Pilot Projects , Catheterization/methods , Inflammation/pathology , Fibrosis
3.
Eur Radiol Exp ; 8(1): 25, 2024 Feb 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38361025

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) yields high cumulative radiation dosages (RD) delivered to patients. We present a temporal interpolation of low frame rate angiograms as a method to reduce cumulative RDs. METHODS: Patients undergoing interventional evaluation and treatment of cerebrovascular vasospasm following subarachnoid hemorrhage were retrospectively identified. DSAs containing pre- and post-intervention runs capturing the full arterial, capillary, and venous phases with at least 16 frames each were selected. Frame rate reduction (FRR) of the original DSAs was performed to 50%, 66%, and 75% of the original frame rate. Missing frames were regenerated by sampling a gamma variate model (GVM) fit to the contrast response curves to the reduced data. A formal reader study was performed to assess the diagnostic accuracy of the "synthetic" studies (sDSA) compared to the original DSA. RESULTS: Thirty-eight studies met inclusion criteria (average RD 1,361.9 mGy). Seven were excluded for differing views, magnifications, or motion. GVMs fit to 50%, 66%, and 75% FRR studies demonstrated average voxel errors of 2.0 ± 2.5% (mean ± standard deviation), 6.5 ± 1.5%, and 27 ± 2%, respectively for anteroposterior projections, 2.0 ± 2.2%, 15.0 ± 3.1%, and 14.8 ± 13.0% for lateral projections, respectively. Reconstructions took 0.51 s/study. Reader studies demonstrated an average rating of 12.8 (95% CI 12.3-13.3) for 75% FRR, 12.7 (12.2-13.2) for 66% FRR and 12.0 (11.5-12.5) for 50% FRR using Subjective Image Grading Scale. Kendall's coefficient of concordance resulted in W = 0.506. CONCLUSION: FRR by 75% combined with GVM reconstruction does not compromise diagnostic quality for the assessment of cerebral vasculature. RELEVANCE STATEMENT: Using this novel algorithm, it is possible to reduce the frame rate of DSA by as much as 75%, with a proportional reduction in radiation exposure, without degrading imaging quality. KEY POINTS: • DSA delivers some of the highest doses of radiation to patients. • Frame rate reduction (FRR) was combined with bolus tracking to interpolate intermediate frames. • This technique provided a 75% FRR with preservation of diagnostic utility as graded by a formal reader study for cerebral angiography performed for the evaluation of cerebral vasospasm. • This approach can be applied to other types of angiography studies.


Subject(s)
Radiation Exposure , Humans , Angiography, Digital Subtraction/methods , Retrospective Studies , Cerebral Angiography/methods , Radiation Dosage
4.
Hepatol Commun ; 7(7)2023 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37314737

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AIMS: Early-stage HCC can be treated with thermal ablation or stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT). We retrospectively compared local progression, mortality, and toxicity among patients with HCC treated with ablation or SBRT in a multicenter, US cohort. APPROACH RESULTS: We included adult patients with treatment-naïve HCC lesions without vascular invasion treated with thermal ablation or SBRT per individual physician or institutional preference from January 2012 to December 2018. Outcomes included local progression after a 3-month landmark period assessed at the lesion level and overall survival at the patient level. Inverse probability of treatment weighting was used to account for imbalances in treatment groups. The Cox proportional hazard modeling was used to compare progression and overall survival, and logistic regression was used for toxicity. There were 642 patients with 786 lesions (median size: 2.1 cm) treated with ablation or SBRT. In adjusted analyses, SBRT was associated with a reduced risk of local progression compared to ablation (aHR 0.30, 95% CI: 0.15-0.60). However, SBRT-treated patients had an increased risk of liver dysfunction at 3 months (absolute difference 5.5%, aOR 2.31, 95% CI: 1.13-4.73) and death (aHR 2.04, 95% CI: 1.44-2.88, p < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: In this multicenter study of patients with HCC, SBRT was associated with a lower risk of local progression compared to thermal ablation but higher all-cause mortality. Survival differences may be attributable to residual confounding, patient selection, or downstream treatments. These retrospective real-world data help guide treatment decisions while demonstrating the need for a prospective clinical trial.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular , Liver Neoplasms , Radiosurgery , Adult , Humans , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/radiotherapy , Retrospective Studies , Radiosurgery/adverse effects , Liver Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Patient Selection
5.
Adv Med Educ Pract ; 12: 1103-1110, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34594147

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Point of care ultrasound (POCUS) is increasingly prevalent and standardized in undergraduate medical education (UME); however, roughly 25% of United States medical schools lack an ultrasound curriculum. One of the commonly cited barriers to ultrasound training in UME is faculty time resources. Here, we describe an ultrasound scholarly concentration program (SCP) designed to provide medical students with ultrasound opportunities in clinical and scholarly domains, while reducing the need for extensive faculty resources. METHODS: SCPs at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine have 3 requirements: an elective course, a longitudinal portfolio, and a final scholarly project. Thus, the ultrasound SCP was designed to comprise an introductory clinical elective to ultrasound, development of a longitudinal scan portfolio, and a final scholarly project in ultrasound related research or educational innovation. A review of the literature and search of the top 50 US medical schools by US News & World Report was performed to assess the novelty of the ultrasound SCP. RESULTS: To the best of our knowledge, the ultrasound SCP is the first scholarly concentration, track or pathway offered to medical students in the United States. It is the first description of a student designed and student led curriculum focused on providing meaningful ultrasound opportunities to students without necessitating unavailable faculty resources and educational infrastructure. CONCLUSION: A novel ultrasound SCP is described which has clinical aims to expose students to clinical ultrasound as well as scholarly aims to facilitate ultrasound related research and educational innovation. It is designed to enable students to make ultrasound a defining characteristic of their medical school experience. The SCP relies on motivated student involvement and near-peer teaching in a way that is self-sustaining and self-improving.

6.
Phys Med Biol ; 64(12): 125019, 2019 06 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31051477

ABSTRACT

Magnetomotive ultrasound (MMUS) contrasts superparamagnetic iron-oxide nanoparticles (SPIOs) that undergo submicrometer-scale displacements in response to a magnetic gradient force applied to an imaging sample. Typically, MMUS signals are defined in a way that is proportional to the medium displacement, rendering an indirect measure of the density distribution of SPIOs embedded within. Displacement-based MMUS, however, suffers from 'halo effects' that extend into regions without SPIOs due to their inherent mechanical coupling with the medium. To reduce such effects and to provide a more accurate representation of the SPIO density distribution, we propose a model-based inversion of MMUS displacement fields by reconstructing the body force distribution. Displacement fields are modelled using the static Navier-Cauchy equation for linear, homogeneous, and isotropic media, and the body force fields are, in turn, reconstructed by minimizing a regularized least-squares error functional between the modelled and the measured displacement fields. This reconstruction, when performed on displacement fields of two tissue-mimicking phantoms with cuboidal SPIO-laden inclusions, improved the range of errors in measured heights and widths of the inclusions from 54%-282% pre-inversion to-15%-20%. Likewise, the post-inversion contrast to noise ratios (CNRs) of the images were significantly larger than displacement-derived CNRs alone (p  = 0.0078, Wilcoxon signed rank test). Qualitatively, it was found that inversion ameliorates halo effects and increases overall detectability of the inclusion. These findings highlight the utility of model-based inversion as a tool for both signal processing and accurate characterization of the number density distribution of SPIOs in magnetomotive imaging.


Subject(s)
Elastic Modulus/physiology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Magnetite Nanoparticles/chemistry , Phantoms, Imaging , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted/instrumentation , Ultrasonography/instrumentation , Contrast Media , Dextrans/chemistry , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Phenomena , Ultrasonography/methods
7.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29993541

ABSTRACT

Direct ultrasonic imaging of arterial and venous thrombi could aid in diagnosis and treatment planning by providing rapid and cost-effective measurements of thrombus volume and elastic modulus. Toward this end, it was demonstrated that open-air magnetomotive ultrasound (MMUS) provides specific contrast to superparamagnetic iron oxide-labeled model thrombi embedded in gelatin-based blood vessel-mimicking flow phantoms. MMUS was performed on model thrombi in the presence of pulsatile flow that mimics cardiac-induced motion found in real vasculature. The MMUS signal and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) were measured across a range of physiologically relevant thrombus volumes and elastic moduli. Model thrombus volumes as small as 0.5 ml were shown to be detectable (CNR > 1) over the entire range of elastic moduli tested (3.5-40 kPa). It was also found that MMUS signal and CNR are increased with increasing thrombus volume ( ) and decreasing elastic modulus ( ), while variations in pulsatile flow rate had little effect. These findings demonstrate that MMUS has promise as a direct in vivo thrombosis imaging modality for quantifying thrombus volume and stiffness.


Subject(s)
Blood Vessels/diagnostic imaging , Elastic Modulus/physiology , Pulsatile Flow/physiology , Thrombosis/diagnostic imaging , Ultrasonography , Angiography , Humans , Magnetite Nanoparticles/chemistry , Models, Cardiovascular , Phantoms, Imaging , Ultrasonography/instrumentation , Ultrasonography/methods
8.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging ; 37(10): 2356-2366, 2018 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29994656

ABSTRACT

In magnetomotive ultrasound (MMUS) imaging, an oscillating external magnetic field displaces tissue loaded with super-paramagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) particles. The induced motion is on the nanometer scale, which makes its detection and its isolation from background motion challenging. Previously, a frequency and phase locking (FPL) algorithm was used to suppress background motion by subtracting magnetic field off ( -off) from on ( -on) data. Shortcomings to this approach include long tracking ensembles and the requirement for -off data. In this paper, a novel blind source separation-based FPL (BSS-FPL) algorithm is presented for detecting motion using a shorter ensemble length (EL) than FPL and without -off data. MMUS imaging of two phantoms containing an SPIO-laden cubical inclusion and one control phantom was performed using an open-air MMUS system. When background subtraction was used, contrast and contrast to noise ratio (CNR) were, respectively, 1.20±0.20 and 1.56±0.34 times higher in BSS-FPL as compared to FPL-derived images for EL < 3.5 s. However, contrast and CNR were similar for BSS-FPL and FPL for EL ≥ 3.5 s. When only -on data was used, contrast and CNR were 1.94 ± 0.21 and 1.56 ± 0.28 times higher, respectively, in BSS-FPL as compared to FPL-derived images for all ELs. Percent error in the estimated width and height was 39.30% ± 19.98% and 110.37% ± 6.5% for FPL and was 7.30% ± 7.6% and 16.21% ± 10.29% for BSS-FPL algorithm. This paper is an important step toward translating MMUS imaging to in vivo application, where long tracking ensembles would increase acquisition time and -off data may be misaligned with -on due to physiological motion.


Subject(s)
Magnetite Nanoparticles/chemistry , Ultrasonography/methods , Algorithms , Equipment Design , Phantoms, Imaging , Principal Component Analysis , Ultrasonography/instrumentation
9.
IEEE Int Ultrason Symp ; 20162016 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29225731

ABSTRACT

Sub-micrometer, periodic motion detection using blind source separation (BSS) via principal component analysis (PCA) is presented in the context of magnetomotive ultrasound (MMUS) imaging and Shearwave Dispersion Ultrasound Vibrometry (SDUV). In MMUS, an oscillating external magnetic field displaces tissue loaded with superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) particles, whereas in SDUV, periodic tissue motion is induced using acoustic radiation force (ARF) to measure visco-elastic properties. BSS motion detection performance in MMUS imaging and SDUV was compared against frequency-phase locked (FPL) and normalized cross-correlation (NCC) motion detectors, respectively, in silico and in experimental phantoms. Parametric MMUS phantom images constructed using the BSS method had nearly twice the SNR of the corresponding images constructed using FPL method when a 0.043 mm or smaller kernel size was used. In FEM models of SDUV, the error in the BSS-estimated viscoelastic properties of simulated materials was < 10%, whereas the error was > 20% using NCC when the simulated SNR was 15 dB. In a calibrated elasticity phantom, the amplitude of the motion was ≤ 0.5 µm for a scanner power level ≤ 20%. The median percent error in BSS-derived shear modulus of the phantom was -6.8%, -1.55%, -17.11% for power level of 20%, 15%, and 10%, respectively. The corresponding NCC-derived errors were 29.90%, 127.1%, and 244.70%. These results suggest the relevance of using BSS for the detection of sub-micrometer, periodic motion in MMUS and SDUV imaging, particularly when SNR is less than 15 dB and/or induced displacements are less than 0.5 µm.

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