Publications by authors named "D R Brallier"

Diagnostic accuracy was evaluated in a signal detection experiment that used low-contrast acute lesions in a living dog model. At the high levels of certainty normally used by radiologists, rare earth screen-film systems provided accuracy comparable to that of a reference calcium tungstate screen-film system. Additionally subjective image quality evaluation for a given imaging task (clinical pediatric anterior-posterior chest films) based on visualization of anatomic landmarks and physical parameters has been conducted for several rare earth and one calcium tungstate screen-film system.

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Data from adult schizophrenic patients suggest that patients with enlarged ventricles have a poorer premorbid history and may have an earlier onset of their illness than patients with ventricles of normal size. The authors examined a group of child psychiatric patients to discover whether these children at risk for major psychopathology had enlarged ventricles. Twenty psychiatric patients showed significantly enlarged ventricles compared with 19 control patients.

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Computed tomography (CT) has fundamentally altered our approach to the initial evaluation and follow-up of patients with spina bifida. This safe and simple, non-invasive diagnostic technique has doubtlessly encouraged earlier diagnosis of clinically significant problems associated with spina bifida and has greatly facilitated the day-to-day management of those patients with documented disorders. CT is now effectively employed as a screening measure for both intraspinal and intracranial problems and can be relied upon to objectively guide and monitor elected modes of therapy.

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Clinical and laboratory observations were made in three children with isosexual precocity. None of the patients showed abnormalities in neurological or visual-field examinations although one patient had arrested hydrocephalus and a head circumference greater than the 98th percentile for her age and another patient had a history of seizures. Roentgenograms of the skull were normal in all patients.

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