Central body fat distribution affects kidney function. Abdominal fat measurements using computed tomography (CT) may prove superior in assessing body composition-related kidney risk in living kidney donors. This retrospective cohort study including 550 kidney donors aimed to determine the association between CT-measured abdominal fat areas and kidney function before and after donor nephrectomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLiving donor kidney transplantation boasts superior patient and graft survival rates compared to deceased donor kidney transplantation. However, the impact of living donor body composition (BC) on post-transplant kidney function remains uncertain. In a cohort of 293 living kidney donor-recipients pairs, we utilized linear mixed model analyses, adjusted for time and including a multiplicative interaction term of time with the donor body composition measure, and found no significant associations between any donor BC measure and the annual change in recipient post-transplantation estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) [donor body mass index (BMI): =-0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Multidisciplinary team meetings (MDTMs) are an important component of the workload of radiologists. This study investigated how often subspecialized radiologists change patient management in MDTMs at a tertiary care institution.
Materials And Methods: Over 2 years, six subspecialty radiologists documented their contributions to MDTMs at a tertiary care center.
Objectives: To compare image quality of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and contrast-enhanced breast MRI (DCE-T1) stratified by the amount of fibroglandular tissue (FGT) as a measure of breast density.
Methods: Retrospective, multi-reader, bicentric visual grading analysis study on breast density (A-D) and overall image and fat suppression quality of DWI and DCE-T1, scored on a standard 5-point Likert scale. Cross tabulations and visual grading characteristic (VGC) curves were calculated for fatty breasts (A/B) versus dense breasts (C/D).