Publications by authors named "Christopher A Potter"

Background And Purpose: Dual energy computed tomography (DECT) is an advanced CT technique which has been shown to improve accuracy in distinguishing between intracranial hemorrhage and calcification, which is often challenging on conventional CT and therefore may warrant repeat imaging in the emergency department (ED) to document stability and exclude enlarging intracranial hemorrhage. We hypothesized that implementation of a DECT head protocol with fully automated post processing in the ED would decrease the need for repeat imaging and therefore reduce overall ED length of stay (LOS).

Materials And Methods: This is a retrospective study comparing ED length of stay over a one-year period before (7/1/2016-6/30/2017) and after (7/1/2018-6/30/2019) implementing a DECT head protocol, for patients scanned for headache, trauma or fall, who were found to have indeterminate intracranial hyperdensities on conventional images, and were subsequently discharged home from the ER (excluding patients who were admitted, taken to the OR, or left against medical advice).

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The clinical syndrome of intracranial hypotension refers to the symptoms caused by cerebrospinal fluid hypovolemia and is primarily characterized by postural headaches, but can be associated with a multitude of other neurological symptoms. Imaging plays a critical role in helping to establish a diagnosis of intracranial hypotension, localize the source of cerebrospinal fluid leak, and assist in directing targeted treatments. Using the best available evidence, this document provides diagnostic imaging recommendations for the workup of intracranial hypotension across various clinical presentations.

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Altered mental status (AMS) and coma are terms used to describe disorders of arousal and content of consciousness. AMS may account for up to 4% to 10% of chief complaints in the emergency department setting and is a common accompanying symptom for other presentations. AMS is not a diagnosis, but rather a term for symptoms of acute or chronic disordered mentation, including confusion, disorientation, lethargy, drowsiness, somnolence, unresponsiveness, agitation, altered behavior, inattention, hallucinations, delusions, and psychosis.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Analysis included 526 patients with newly diagnosed GBM and 580 with recurrent GBM, revealing similar correlations in progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) between RANO and mRANO.
  • * Findings indicate that confirmation scans within 12 weeks post-radiotherapy improve assessment accuracy, while the iRANO criteria did not provide additional benefits over RANO and mRANO.
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There is constant evolution in the diagnosis and treatment of acute ischemic stroke due to advances in treatments, imaging, and outreach. Two major revolutions were the advent of intravenous thrombolysis in the 1990s and endovascular thrombectomy in 2010s. Neuroimaging approaches have also evolved with key goals-detect hemorrhage, augment thrombolysis treatment selection, detect arterial occlusion, estimate infarct core, estimate viable penumbra, and augment thrombectomy treatment selection.

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Dual-energy computed tomography (DECT) has developed into a robust set of techniques with increasingly validated clinical applications in neuroradiology. We review some of the most common applications in neuroimaging along with demonstrative case examples that showcase the use of this technology in intracranial hemorrhage, stroke imaging, trauma imaging, artifact reduction, and tumor characterization.

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Background Diagnostic uncertainty in CT of possible intracranial hemorrhage requires short-interval follow-up imaging, resulting in reduced efficiency of care and higher costs. Purpose To quantify the diagnostic performance of dual-energy CT versus simulated single-energy CT in the differentiation of small foci of intracranial hemorrhage from calcium. Materials and Methods Images from consecutive unenhanced dual-energy CT of the head in patients from a single emergency department obtained from December 2014 to April 2016 were reviewed retrospectively for hyperattenuating intracranial foci.

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CT is the primary imaging modality used for selecting appropriate treatment in patients with acute stroke. Awareness of the typical findings, pearls, and pitfalls of CT image interpretation is therefore critical for radiologists, stroke neurologists, and emergency department providers to make accurate and timely decisions regarding both immediate treatment with intravenous tissue plasminogen activator up to 4.5 hours after a stroke at primary stroke centers and transfer of patients with large-vessel occlusion (LVO) at CT angiography to comprehensive stroke centers for endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) up to 24 hours after a stroke.

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The published version of this article unfortunately contained a mistake. Author given and family name Alessandrino Francesco was incorrectly interchanged. The correct presentation is given above.

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Blunt laryngeal trauma is associated with high morbidity and mortality. However, owing to their relatively rare occurrence, laryngeal injuries may be missed or underdiagnosed. Even subtle abnormalities at multidetector CT may correspond to significant functional abnormalities.

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Purpose: To describe and categorize diagnostic errors in cervical spine CT (CsCT) interpretation performed for trauma and to assess their clinical significance.

Methods: All CsCTs performed for trauma with diagnostic errors that came to our attention based on clinical or imaging follow-up or quality assurance peer review from 2004 to 2017 were included. The number of CsCTs performed at our institution during the same time interval was calculated.

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Visits to the emergency department by patients who have recently undergone neurosurgery are a common occurrence, and these patients frequently receive emergent cross-sectional head imaging in order to evaluate for complications. Different neurosurgical approaches may have typical postoperative imaging findings that can be confused with pathology. Furthermore, particular abnormal postoperative imaging findings may signal an evolving complication.

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Neuroimaging in the emergency department increasingly involves patients at increased risk for acute neurologic complications from malignancy and immunosuppression, including patients with organ transplantation, diabetes mellitus, treatment of chronic disease, and HIV positivity. These patients are susceptible to the same infections and emergencies as immunocompetent patients, but may present differently with common illnesses and are susceptible to a variety of other diseases. This article reviews important patient risk factors, emergent central nervous system abnormalities, and their imaging findings.

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This is the 27th installment of a series that will highlight one case per publication issue from the bank of cases available online as part of the American Society of Emergency Radiology (ASER) educational resources. Our goal is to generate more interest in and use of our online materials. To view more cases online, please visit the ASER Core Curriculum and Recommendations for Study online at http://www.

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Dual-energy computed tomography (CT) is a powerful diagnostic tool that is becoming more widely clinically available. Dual-energy CT has the potential to aid in the detection or add diagnostic confidence in the evaluation of a variety of emergent neurologic conditions with use of postprocessing techniques that allow one to take advantage of the different x-ray energy-dependent absorption behaviors of different materials. Differentiating iodine from hemorrhage may help in delineating CT angiographic spot signs, which are small foci of intracranial hemorrhage seen on CT angiograms in cases of acute hemorrhage.

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Purpose To quantify the rate of detection of aneurysms at follow-up digital subtraction angiography (DSA) after initial DSA with results negative for aneurysms in subjects with perimesencephalic (PM) nonaneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. Materials and Methods This single-center retrospective study and meta-analysis was approved by the institutional review board. At a single institution from 2000 to 2013, 252 consecutive patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage at computed tomography (CT) and two DSA examinations negative for aneurysm within 10 days were evaluated for inclusion in the study, and 131 met CT criteria for PM nonaneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (53 women; mean age, 53 years [range, 33-88 years]).

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We present the radiologic findings and intraoperative correlation of a torsed Meckel's diverticulum leading to small-bowel obstruction in a 65-year-old male without prior abdominal surgery. As this is a rare entity and difficult to diagnose, an understanding of the clinical presentation and radiologic findings correlated with this pathology can help to expedite diagnosis and treatment.

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Purpose: To use magnetization tagged magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (tag-MRI) to quantify cardiac induced liver strain and compare strain of cirrhotic and normal livers.

Materials And Methods: Tag-MRI was performed at 1.5T on eight subjects with no history of liver disease and 10 patients with liver cirrhosis.

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Diffusion-weighted (DWI) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a highly sensitive and specific test for diagnosis of sporadic Jakob-Creutzfeldt disease (sCJD); however, the neuropathologic origin of DWI signal abnormalities including other clinical features has not been well defined. We describe a case of sCJD with brain MRI taken 15 days before death, which provided an opportunity to correlate clinical, electroencephalogram, MRI, and neuropathologic findings to better understand which sCJD-specific neuropathologic changes underlie the DWI abnormalities. Clinical findings correlated well with both electroencephalogram and MRI changes.

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Prr is a global regulatory system that controls a large and diverse range of genes in Rhodobacter sphaeroides in response to changing conditions of environmental redox potential. PrrB is the membrane-bound sensor kinase and previously we showed that the purified, detergent-solubilised intact membrane protein is functional in autophosphorylation, phosphotransfer and phosphatase activities. Here we confirm that it also senses and responds directly to its environmental signal, redox potential; strong autophosphorylation of PrrB occurred in response to dithiothreitol (DTT)-induced reducing conditions (and levels increased in response to a wide 0.

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Article Synopsis
  • The RegA/RegB system in Rhodobacter sphaeroides regulates growth under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, with RegB acting as a histidine protein kinase and RegA as a response regulator.
  • Researchers successfully expressed and purified full-length RegB in E. coli, enabling the study of its properties.
  • Both full-length and solubilized RegB exhibit similar autophosphorylation activities under different oxygen conditions, but the full-length version is dephosphorylated faster, suggesting that its transmembrane segment may play a key role in regulating its function.
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