Publications by authors named "Lette J"

We designed a device for quick and accurate measurement of arm volume at home. The device is non-commercial, and plans for construction and use are widely available. A single subject with arm lymphedema used the volumeter at home for more than one year and learned to better self-manage her condition.

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Purpose: We designed an arm volumeter specifically for home use based on the water displacement method. The objective of this study was to determine its accuracy and precision, and compare it with a standard volumeter used in lymphedema clinics worldwide.

Patients And Methods: Using a standard model hospital volumeter and our own device, we took three consecutive measurements of 11 specially cast cylinders, which had known volumes ranging from 10 mL to 4 L, and measurements of both arms of 15 volunteers.

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Background: Solitary pulmonary microembolism is rarely discussed as a distinct diagnostic entity. The purpose of this investigation was to determine the prevalence and clinical significance of embolism limited to subsegmental branches in a group of patients discharged from hospital on anticoagulants with a diagnosis of pulmonary embolism based on ventilation-perfusion imaging followed by selective angiography.

Material And Methods: Of 29 consecutive patients with classic signs of pulmonary embolism at angiography, we identified a subgroup of 5 patients with sub-segmental embolism, which was solitary in all cases.

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The objectives of this study were to determine if diagnostic certainty on angiography correlates with scintigraphic probability for the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism. From a total of 160 consecutive patients who underwent both nuclear imaging and invasive selective pulmonary angiography, we reviewed the xenon-133 ventilation images in 2 posterior oblique views and the Tc-99m macroaggregated serum albumin perfusion scans and angiograms of 40 patients (15 men, 25 women; average age 57 years) who were discharged from the hospital on anticoagulants with a diagnosis of pulmonary embolism. The angiograms were reviewed and the diagnosis of embolism was considered certain in the presence of an intraluminal filling defect, a trailing embolus, or a branch occlusion equal to or larger than a segmental branch (n=29; 73%), and uncertain when the studies were reinterpreted as either equivocal or negative or in the presence of a single, small subsegmental filling defect of questionable clinical significance.

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A completely operator-independent boundary detection algorithm for multigated blood pool (MGBP) studies has been evaluated at four medical centers. The knowledge-based boundary detector (KBBD) algorithm is nondeterministic, utilizing a priori domain knowledge in the form of rule sets for the localization of cardiac chambers and image features, providing a case-by-case method for the identification and boundary definition of the left ventricle (LV). The nondeterministic algorithm employs multiple processing pathways, where KBBD rules have been designed for conventional (CONV) imaging geometries (nominal 45 degrees LAO, nonzoom) as well as for highly zoomed and/or caudally tilted (ZOOM) studies.

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This study was undertaken to assess the reliability of clinical parameters and dipyridamole-thallium 201 images for predicting the occurrence of future cardiac events (nonfatal myocardial infarction or cardiac death). Dipyridamole myocardial perfusion imaging is routinely performed in patients who have possible or known coronary disease and a low exercise tolerance. A total of 753 patients underwent clinical assessment and semiquantitative dipyridamole-201TI imaging and were followed up as outpatients.

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Chest pain because of a disorder of the coronary circulation is assumed to be ischemic in nature. Irrespective of the underlying pathophysiological mechanism, it is accepted that all routes lead to myocardial ischemia in the pathway to anginal pain. The authors describe a patient with a history of vasoactive disorders including migraine, asthma, documented variant angina with prolonged episodes of chest pain, and scintigraphic evidence of inferior and posterior wall ischemia during exercise and ergonovine testing in the absence of significant underlying stenoses.

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Background: Dipyridamole imaging is widely used as an alternative to exercise testing to identify and risk stratify patients with coronary artery disease. Safety data on intravenous dipyridamole stress testing has been derived largely from individual institutional data.

Methods And Results: Data were collected retrospectively by 85 coinvestigators from 73,806 patients who underwent intravenous dipyridamole stress imaging in 59 hospitals and 19 countries to determine the incidence of major adverse reactions during testing.

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The traditional approach to developing models predictive of cardiac events has been to perform logistic regression (LR) analysis on a variety of potential predictors. An alternative to use an artificial intelligence system called a neural network (NN) which simulates biological intelligence. To evaluate the potential applicability of the latter method, we compared the ability of LR and NN techniques to predict cardiac events after noncardiac surgery.

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Exercise myocardial perfusion imaging with Tc-99m sestaMIBI is routinely used to detect underlying coronary stenoses. Ischemia is diagnosed in regions that display decreased tracer uptake during exercise as compared to rest. Tc-99m sestaMIBI SPECT images of 42 healthy volunteers were assessed both qualitatively (tomographic slices) and quantitatively (sectored polar map) for potential sources of misinterpretation.

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Objective: To determine the prognostic implication of exercise and dipyridamole-induced transient left ventricular cavitary dilation (TLVD).

Design: TLVD was observed and a follow-up obtained in 61 patients after exercise and in 62 patients following dipyridamole infusion.

Patients: There was no statistical difference between groups in terms of sex, history of hypertension, diabetes, renal failure, previous myocardial infarction, severity of angina syndrome, congestive heart failure, resting electrocardiographic (ECG) abnormalities, clinical or ECG signs of ischemia during stress, number of reversible perfusion defects on thallium images or duration of follow-up (21 months).

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Primary and secondary psoas abscesses are uncommon and frequently misdiagnosed. Two cases of pyogenic psoas abscess are presented to illustrate the usefulness of Ga-67 scintigraphy in determining the presence and the extent of the infectious process.

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The authors describe a patient with a rare type of renal arteriovenous malformation, which was successfully treated by therapeutic coil embolization. Embolization did not destroy healthy renal tissue, as was shown by the Cerino technique, which measures the glomerular filtration rate of each kidney by image processing for standard renograms obtained after administration of diethylene-triaminepenta-acetic acid labelled with technetium 99m.

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A total of 360 patients underwent preoperative cardiac risk assessment using 23 clinical parameters, seven multivariate clinical scoring systems, and quantitative dipyridamole-thallium imaging to predict postoperative and long-term myocardial infarction and cardiac death after noncardiac surgery. There were 30 postoperative and an additional 13 cumulative long-term cardiac events after an average follow-up of 15 months. Clinical descriptors were not useful in predicting the outcome of individual patients.

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A 3-step, 3-segment scintigraphic model was developed to improve the accuracy of dipyridamole-thallium imaging for preoperative cardiac risk assessment and to simplify the prognostic interpretation of the images. The model was developed in a pilot study of 60 patients and validated in a group of 355 patients referred for vascular and major general surgery. Study end points included myocardial infarction and cardiac death.

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Patients And Methods: A total of 360 patients with either normal perfusion (314) or fixed defects (46) on dipyridamole-thallium scans were followed over an average period of 16 months. Of the 360 patients, 194 subsequently underwent major noncardiac surgery.

Results: There were a total of eight cardiac events including two postoperative complications (one fatal and one nonfatal myocardial infarction) and six cardiac events during long-term follow-up (one sudden death and five nonfatal infarctions).

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A total of 372 consecutive dipyridamole-thallium studies were reviewed to determine if a relationship existed between the dose of dipyridamole administered and the likelihood that thallium images would show reversible defects. Men who received a dose of less than 31 mg were less likely to have thallium redistribution (P = 0.0001).

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Patients with peripheral vascular disease have a high prevalence of coronary artery disease and are at increased risk for cardiac morbidity and death after vascular reconstruction. The present study was undertaken to assess the value of 18 clinical parameters, of 7 clinical scoring systems, and of quantitative dipyridamole-thallium imaging for predicting the occurrence of postoperative myocardial infarction or cardiac death. Vascular surgery was performed in 125 patients.

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