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1.
Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg ; 19(3): 443-448, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38233598

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Edema, or swelling, is a common symptom of kidney, heart, and liver disease. Volumetric edema measurement is potentially clinically useful. Edema can occur in various tissues. This work focuses on segmentation and volume measurement of one common site, subcutaneous adipose tissue. METHODS: The density distributions of edema and subcutaneous adipose tissue are represented as a two-class Gaussian mixture model (GMM). In previous work, edema regions were segmented by selecting voxels with density values within the edema density distribution. This work improves upon the prior work by generating an adipose tissue mask without edema through a conditional generative adversarial network. The density distribution of the generated mask was imported into a Chan-Vese level set framework. Edema and subcutaneous adipose tissue are separated by iteratively updating their respective density distributions. RESULTS: Validation results on 25 patients with edema showed that the segmentation accuracy significantly improved. Compared to GMM, the average Dice Similarity Coefficient increased from 56.0 to 61.7% ([Formula: see text]) and the relative volume difference decreased from 36.5 to 30.2% ([Formula: see text]). CONCLUSION: The generated adipose tissue density prior improved edema segmentation accuracy. Accurate edema volume measurement may prove clinically useful.


Subject(s)
Abdomen , Heart Failure , Humans , Edema/diagnostic imaging , Adipose Tissue/diagnostic imaging , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods
2.
World J Orthop ; 14(6): 427-435, 2023 Jun 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37377996

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Epidemiological understanding of acute sternoclavicular (SC) dislocations secondary to sports across the United States is poorly defined. AIM: To identify and assess epidemiological trends of SC dislocations occurring secondary to sports-related mechanisms across United States over the past two decades. METHODS: This cross-sectional, descriptive epidemiological study evaluates epidemiological trends of SC dislocations from sports that present to emergency departments (EDs) across the United States. Data were obtained from the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System database spanning two decades. Data on incidence, patient demographics, mechanisms of injury, dislocation types, incident locales, and patient dispositions were collected. RESULTS: 1622 SC dislocations occurred nationwide from 2001 to 2020 [incidence = 0.262/1000000 people, confidence interval (CI) = 0.250-0.275], comprising 0.1% of shoulder/upper trunk dislocations. Most patients were male (91%, n = 1480) and aged 5-17 (61%, n = 982). Football, wrestling, and biking were the most frequently implicated sports, with contact sports responsible for 59% of athletic injuries (n = 961). Recreational vehicle-related sports injuries, such as all-terrain vehicles, dirt bikes, and mopeds accounted for 7.8% of all injuries (n = 126), with dirt bikes specifically comprising 3.7% (n = 61). Ultimately, 82% were discharged from the ED (n = 1337), 12% were admitted (n = 194), and 6% were transferred (n = 90). All recorded posterior dislocations were admitted or transferred from the ED. Patients sustaining SC dislocations from contact sports had a significantly increased risk of hospital admission or transfer rather than discharge from the ED as compared to patients whose injuries were from non-contact sports (incidence rate ratio = 1.46, CI: = 1.32-1.61, P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: SC dislocations from sports continue to be rare with a stably low incidence over the past two decades, likely comprising a smaller proportion of shoulder dislocations than previously thought. Contact sports are a frequent source of injury, especially among school-aged and teenage males. Most patients are discharged directly from the ED; however, a substantial number are hospitalized, many of which had documented posterior dislocations. Ultimately, understanding the epidemiology and mechanism-related trends of acute SC dislocations is important given the potential severity of these injuries, concentration in a specific population, and uncertainty linked to rare presentation.

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