Publications by authors named "Chafetz N"

Root-form titanium dental implants are the treatment of choice for many partially and totally edentulous patients. The overall success rate is greater than 95%. Postoperative pain is usually the result of infection.

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Segmental spinal instability was evaluated with magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, computed tomography (CT), and conventional radiography in 33 patients who had undergone surgical spinal fusion. In 16 of the 19 patients who had a diagnosis of solid fusion, the immobilized vertebral bodies demonstrated areas of high signal intensity on images with short repetition time (TR) and echo time (TE). The signal intensity of these areas was either less intense or normal on images with long TR and TE.

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High-resolution thin section CT with cross-sectional oblique and panoramic CT reconstructions has been shown to be an excellent tool for the preoperative evaluation of the mandible and maxilla for dental implant surgery. Oblique cross-sections throughout the entire surgical field allow visualization of osseous topography as well as related internal anatomic structures such as the inferior alveolar canal, the mental foramina, the incisive canal, and the maxillary sinuses. Armed with this knowledge, the surgeon-restorative dentist team can plan fixture positioning more effectively, thereby minimizing surprises in the operating room.

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Twenty-five symptomatic postlumbar surgery patients had findings on lumbar spinal noncontrast CT that were equivocal for distinguishing recurrent disk herniation from postoperative epidural fibrosis (scar). Contrast-enhanced CT and lumbar MR imaging were performed to differentiate these two conditions. Of the 14 levels, surgically explored, the diagnosis of scar or recurrent disk herniation was correct with contrast-enhanced CT at 10 levels and with MR imaging at 11 levels.

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40 patients with spondylolisthesis and/or spondylolysis were studied by magnetic resonance imaging (MR), 12 of whom with correlation to CT. CT proved to be more sensitive in detecting pars defects than MR. Sagittal MR, however, was more accurate in assessing spondylolisthesis than axial CT.

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Magnetic resonance (MR) images, contact radiographs, and histologic sections of six femoral head specimens with avascular necrosis were correlated. A low-signal-intensity band or ring represented the repair tissue interface surrounding a high-signal-intensity necrotic marrow segment. Large segmental areas of low signal intensity were observed on T1-weighted images when the lesion consisted of necrotic bone with amorphous marrow debris and adjacent thickened trabecular bone with mesenchymal repair tissue infiltration.

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Fifteen asymptomatic volunteers and 19 patients with current CT (GE 8800 CT/T) scans demonstrating either thecal sac contour distortion or nerve root displacement from disc rupture or spinal stenosis of the L4-L5 or L5-S1 levels judged to be at least moderate in severity underwent lumbar thermography. All patients were studied with an infrared telethermographic unit (AGA model 720M) employing the technical standards recommended by the Academy of Neuromuscular Thermography. The thermographic exams were interpreted independently and in a blind fashion by two radiologists.

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Ambiguities in diagnoses can often be resolved when images from different imaging modalities are compared, and when images are processed with algorithms that improve resolution and contrast. Bayesean deblurring algorithms were developed and applied to Planar and SPECT images of the maxillofacial and temporomandibular joint regions. The combined use of Planar and SPECT imaging with Bayesean deblurring were complementary and provided more diagnostic information than either modality individually.

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Three-dimensional (3D) CT and 3D magnetic resonance (MR) imaging were performed in four patients with congenital dysplasia of the hip. Two patients were studied by 3D CT and two by 3D MR. Prior to volume segmentation, two-dimensional (2D) MR image preprocessing was used to correct for nonuniform signal intensity distribution from local variations in field strength and coil response.

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Three-dimensional computed tomography (3-D-CT) and multiplanar CT reformations were performed in 42 patients who were clinically suspected of spinal instability following posterior lumbar fusion. Sagittal and coronal CT reformations demonstrated fusion pseudarthrosis more frequently than axial CT or conventional radiography. Three-dimensional CT cuts through the fusion revealed pseudarthrosis in most patients with positive 2-D images.

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Signs and symptoms of craniomandibular dysfunction in 37 patients were compared with the results of corrected cephalometric tomography and an emission imaging protocol consisting of both planar and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) (7500 ZLC Orbiter) images. The planar images and the single photon emission computed tomography projection views were processed with a bayesian deblurring algorithm to improve image quality. The correlation of emission imaging with craniomandibular dysfunction, as indicated by temporomandibular joint pain and joint noise, showed a high sensitivity (93%) and a high specificity (86%), whereas the correlation of corrected cephalometric tomography with temporomandibular joint pain and joint noise showed a relatively high sensitivity (89%) but a low specificity (27%).

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Three-dimensional (3-D) surface reconstructions and multiplanar computed tomography (CT) reformations were obtained in 30 patients with clinically suspected spinal fusion pseudarthrosis. The imaging studies were blind-reviewed and the results were compared with the clinical and surgical findings. Sagittal, planar, and curved coronal two-dimensional (2-D) reformations were more useful in the detection of bony nonunion than were axial CT scans, as the latter required more extensive analysis.

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MR tomography was used to assess functional lumbar stability in 30 patients with posterolateral fusions. The vertebral bodies of 9 of the 12 patients with unstable lumbar fusions presented with areas of decreased signal intensity on T1- and intermediately weighted images, which increased on T2-weighting. The vertebrae of 15 of the 18 patients with stable fusions demonstrated zones of increased signal intensity on T1- and intermediately weighted images, which were less intense or invisible on T2-weighing.

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Twenty patients with fusions of the lumbar spine (seven with pseudarthrosis, 11 with solid bony fusions, and two with fusions that appeared solid but assessment was complicated by the presence of surgical hardware) underwent computed tomographic (CT) scanning in the supine position in the axial plane and, employing a specially designed seat, in the coronal plane. Three-millimeter contiguous sections were acquired. The direct coronal images were compared with those reformated from the axial images.

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A quantitative three-dimensional measurement method, radiographic stereophotogrammetry (SPG), was employed to assess the relation between early subsidence of the femoral prosthesis after total hip arthroplasty (THA) and subsequent clinical course. The SPG technique and the authors' error control mechanisms are described in 15 patients in the early postoperative period, and the findings are correlated with those of follow-up clinical examinations. Among the 12 patients who remained clinically asymptomatic with respect to pain, only one had an SPG estimate of subsidence in excess of 1 mm at any point in time.

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CT has become the imaging modality of choice for diagnosing the specific cause of low back pain syndrome. This article describes and illustrates those abnormalities commonly associated with low back pain: disk herniation, spinal stenoses, facet joint abnormalities, spondylosis, inflammatory conditions of the lumbar spine, and sacroiliitis.

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One hundred eleven patients with symptomatic prosthetic joints (86 hips, 23 knees, and two shoulders) were evaluated for prosthetic loosening and infection by combined technetium-99m-MDP/gallium-67 digital subtraction imaging. Clinical correlation was based on the assessment of loosening and bacterial cultures obtained at the time of surgery in 54 patients, joint aspiration cultures obtained in 37 patients, and long-term clinical follow-up for greater than 1.5 years in an additional 15 patients.

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A computer-assisted photogrammetric method for the detection of pseudarthrosis following spinal fusion is described. This radiologic method is quantitative and noninvasive and requires a minimum of clinician time. Results of tests with a phantom specimen are presented.

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It has been assumed that magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) would have limited utility in visualizing bones, due to the lack of hydrogen atoms in cortical bone. Nonetheless, that same lack makes it possible to clearly distinguish cortical bone from soft tissue and from marrow. Thus, roles are described for magnetic resonance imaging in depicting bone and soft tissue tumors, the spine (including the spinal cord and vertebral discs), and appendicular soft tissue, as well as the detection of avascular necrosis in the hip.

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A radiographic stereophotogrammetric technique (SPG) was used to evaluate quantitatively the presence of early femoral prosthesis subsidence after total hip arthroplasty (THA). This paper focuses on the measurement of subsidence in 12 patients who remained asymptomatic during the first two years after surgery. Only one of these had SPG estimated subsidence in excess of one millimeter at any timepoint.

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Fifteen nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies of 14 patients with herniated lumbar intervertebral disks were performed on the UCSF NMR imager. Computed tomographic (CT) scans done on a GE CT/T 8800 or comparable scanner were available at the time of NMR scan interpretation. Of the 16 posterior disk ruptures seen at CT, 12 were recognized on NMR.

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In a study of 45 adults in a family of Mexican-Indian ancestry, it was found that 22 (49%) had joint symptoms resembling those of degenerative joint disease. Eleven family members had radiographic evidence of chondrocalcinosis, and 1 adult and 3 adolescents had clinical histories and examinations consistent with the familial arthropathy, but no radiographic evidence of disease. The cause of the arthritis in the affected family members is calcium pyrophosphate crystal deposition.

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Thirty healthy subjects and 15 patients with a variety of musculoskeletal disorders were examined by conventional radiography, computed tomography (CT), and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). NMR proved capable of demonstrating important anatomic structures in the region of the lumbosacral spine. Lumbar disk protrusion was demonstrated in three patients with CT evidence of the disease.

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