Publications by authors named "Lacheheb D"

Blood pressure is universally measured by the auscultatory method, but the origin of the Korotkoff sounds remains controversial. A reproducible, brief and high amplitude signal, simultaneous to the Korotkoff sound, and instantly followed by the systolic wave, was recorded amongst ten healthy subjects by a pulsed Doppler examination during the deflation of the sphygmomanometer. A device simulating the brachial artery was also built in order to reproduce the high amplitude signal.

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A prospective study was designed to determine the utility of computed tomography (CT) during arterial portography (CTAP) in the detection of superior mesenteric vessels and portal vein involvement in patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Eighteen patients with adenocarcinoma of the head of the pancreas and eight patients with benign pancreatic disease were investigated with CTAP, dynamic contrast-enhanced CT, and angiography. Appropriate review was made to determine presence or absence of superior mesenteric vessels and portal vein involvement.

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Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of precontrast injection of papaverine hydrochloride into the superior mesenteric artery on the degree of contrast enhancement of the hepatic parenchyma during CT arterial portography (CTAP, CT with injection of contrast material into the superior mesenteric artery).

Subjects And Methods: Twenty-two patients were included in this study. All patients had a baseline unenhanced CT scan and then had CTAP performed with transcatheter injection of 150 ml of nonionic iodinated contrast material (30 g iodine/100 ml) at a rate of 2 ml/sec.

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Two techniques for focal liver lesion biopsy were retrospectively evaluated to compare relative safety and efficacy. After sonographic localization of the focal liver lesion and biopsy with a hand-held 18-gauge cutting needle, a pathologically adequate specimen was obtained in 49 of 55 cases (89%) requiring 1 to 4 passes (mean, 2.1 per patient).

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Objective: A retrospective study was performed to determine the causes of false-positive diagnoses based on CT findings obtained during superior mesenteric arterial portography (CT portography) and to correlate the imaging characteristics of the incorrectly diagnosed lesions with their pathologic findings.

Materials And Methods: In a series of 52 patients who had CT portography before surgical exploration of the liver, eight had a total of 10 false-positive findings, yielding a false-positive diagnosis rate of 15%. In eight cases, the false-positive findings from CT portography were correlated with the histologic material obtained during partial hepatic resection or intraoperative biopsies at the corresponding sites.

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A 34-year-old woman with liver cirrhosis and portal hypertension was admitted for gastric bleeding due to congestive gastropathy. Her past medical history included 4 episodes of variceal rupture within the last 5 months. As medical treatment was a failure, an emergency transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt was successfully performed, resulting in a marked drop in portal pressure (from 32 to 15 mm Hg) and a subsequent arrest of acute hemorrhage.

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We present two cases of adenomatous hyperplastic nodules (AHN) occurring in patients with chronic Budd-Chiari syndrome who were investigated with MRI. In one case the foci of AHN were isointense to the liver on spin echo (SE) T1-weighted MRI and were hyperintense on both SE proton density and SE T2-weighted MRI. In the other case the nodules were hyper-intense on SE T1-weighted MRI.

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A prospective randomized study was performed to compare conventional right internal jugular vein catheterization technique with high-resolution sonographically guided catheterization for transjugular liver biopsy. Forty-seven patients were assigned to undergo either conventional or high-resolution sonographically guided right internal jugular vein catheterization for transjugular liver biopsy. Sonographic guidance was significantly better than conventional guidance, reducing the number of failed catheterizations, from 22% (5 of 23) to 0% (0 of 24) (p < .

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