Publications by authors named "J E Schwieso"

Sixteen infants with hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy (HIE) were studied using serial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) up to the age of 2 years. The infants had regular neurological and developmental assessments. An nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) score was devised to quantify the early and late MRI findings and a neurological optimality score was used to quantify abnormal neurological signs at the time of the final examination.

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Louisa Nottidge was kidnapped and committed to a private asylum in 1846 by her family because she had joined a millenarian sect of which they disapproved. After eighteen months the Commissioners in Lunacy were pressurised into ordering her release. Subsequently, she successfully sued her brother and brother-in-law for wrongful imprisonment.

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Fast scan magnetic resonance imaging techniques for adipose tissue (AT) quantification were compared to a conventional T1-weighted spin-echo (SE) sequence (TR = 500 ms, TE = 20 ms), imaging a mid-abdominal slice. A rapid T1-weighted SE sequence (TR = 36 ms, TE = 14 ms) was optimal, with minimal distortion (field, motion, flow artefact). Tissue contrast was higher and visceral AT was clearly differentiated.

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We describe two methods of breast immobilization using the lateral decubitus position to increase patient comfort and access to the axillary tail for MR-guided biopsy in the postsurgical or irradiated breast. The first method uses a compression device with good immobilization but poor patient tolerance. The second approach uses a thermoplastic mesh material to form a rigid exoskeleton around the breast: immobilization is adequate and patient acceptability is good.

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Eighteen term infants with hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy (HIE) were studied with serial magnetic resonance imaging of the brain for up to two months following birth. Important early findings included brain swelling, cortical highlighting, diffuse loss of grey/white differentiation and loss of signal in the posterior limb of the internal capsule (PLIC). These signs were easier to identify on T1-weighted spin echo or inversion recovery sequences than on T2-weighted spin echo sequences.

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