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1.
Eur Radiol ; 23(12): 3422-31, 2013 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23832388

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate bone marrow changes on knee magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with 3- to 6-week-long period of unloading. METHODS: MRI knee examinations were performed in 30 patients (14 men, 16 women; aged 20-53 years) at baseline and 5-10 weeks after immobilisation of the ipsilateral lower extremity; subsets of patients were examined at additional time-points. Ten volunteers (4 men, 6 women; aged 20-50 years) were studied as control cohort at two time-points. Bone marrow signal abnormalities were analysed according to: (1) severity, (2) signal alteration relative to hyaline cartilage, (3) morphology, (4) increased vascularity in the knee joint and (5) T1-signal alteration. Spearman's rank correlation test (SRC) and Kendall's tau (KT) were used to compare individual scores. RESULTS: All 30 patients presented abnormal bone marrow findings after unloading, which reached a peak at 10-25 weeks (P <0.001). These findings decreased within 1 year (P < 0.001). High scores of severity were associated with confluent and patchy patterns of bone marrow (SCR = 0.923, P < 0.001 and KT = 0.877, P <0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Signal abnormalities of the bone marrow related to unloading are consistent findings and most prominent 10-25 weeks following immobilisation when both confluent and patchy hyperintense patterns are present.


Assuntos
Medula Óssea/patologia , Imobilização , Articulação do Joelho/patologia , Transtornos Musculares Atróficos/patologia , Adulto , Fraturas do Tornozelo , Ligamento Cruzado Anterior/cirurgia , Lesões do Ligamento Cruzado Anterior , Deambulação Precoce , Feminino , Fêmur/irrigação sanguínea , Fêmur/patologia , Seguimentos , Traumatismos do Pé/cirurgia , Humanos , Articulação do Joelho/irrigação sanguínea , Estudos Longitudinais , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Patela/irrigação sanguínea , Patela/patologia , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Estudos Retrospectivos , Tíbia/irrigação sanguínea , Tíbia/patologia , Suporte de Carga , Adulto Jovem
2.
Pract Radiat Oncol ; 2(1): 27-34, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24674033

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Metal artifacts can degrade computed tomographic (CT) simulation imaging and impair accurate delineation of tumors for radiation treatment planning purposes. We investigated a Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine-based metal artifact reduction technique in tonsillar cancer delineation. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Eight patients with significant artifact and tonsil cancer were evaluated. Each patient had a positron emission tomography (PET)-CT and a contrast-enhanced CT obtained at the same setting during radiotherapy simulation. The CTs were corrected for artifact using the metal deletion technique (MDT). Two radiation oncologists independently delineated primary gross tumor volumes (GTVs) for each patient on native (CTnonMDT), metal corrected (CTMDT), and reference standard (CTPET/nonMDT) imaging, 1 week apart. Mixed effects models were used to determine if differences among GTVs were statistically significant. Two diagnostic radiologists and 2 radiation oncologists independently qualitatively evaluated CTs for each patient. Ratings were on an ordinal scale from -3 to +3, denoting that CTMDT was markedly, moderately, or slightly worse or better than CTnonMDT. Scores were compared with a Wilcoxon signed-rank test. RESULTS: The GTVPET/nonMDT were significantly smaller than GTVnonMDT (P = .004) and trended to be smaller than GTVMDT (P = .084). The GTVnonMDT and GTVMDT were not significantly different (P = .93). There was no significant difference in the extent to which GTVnonMDT or GTVMDT encompassed GTVPET/nonMDT (P = .33). In the subjective assessment of image quality, CTMDT did not significantly outperform CTnonMDT. In the majority of cases, the observer rated the CTMDT equivalent to (53%) or slightly superior (41%) to the corresponding CTnonMDT. CONCLUSIONS: The MTD modified images did not produce GTVMDT that more closely reproduced GTVPET/nonMDT than did GTVnonMDT. Moreover, the MTD modified images were not judged to be significantly superior when compared to the uncorrected images in terms of subjective ability to visualize the tonsilar tumors. This study failed to demonstrate value of the adjunctive use of a CT corrected for artifacts in the tumor delineation process. Artifacts do make tumor delineation challenging, and further investigation of other body sites is warranted.

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