Gastroenterology
November 1994
Background/aims: Scintigraphic studies give detailed information on colonic transit. In this study, several methods of presenting such data were compared and discussed. The aim of the study was to evaluate the role of geometric center (GC) and parametric images in interpretation of colonic transit studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn two large inner city hospitals we have conducted a survey of the letters sent to patients before their attendance at a nuclear medicine department. The majority of questions asked for a graded answer (poor, fair, ok, good, excellent). Patients were handed the survey form when they had completed their test and the survey was continued until 100 valid replies had been received at each hospital.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA patient satisfaction survey was carried out in a nuclear medicine department of a large acute hospital. Surveys were initially carried out by interview and postal techniques, with approximately 100 responders in each category. The responses to each question were not significantly different for the two types of survey, although overall there was a significantly larger number of dissatisfied responses in the postal survey (22%) compared with the interview study (12%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA polymer-coated capsule has been used in eight volunteer subjects to deliver 111In-resin into the ileocaecal region. The images were acquired for up to 3 days to follow transit through the colon. Expressing the results of individual studies is difficult and time-activity curves for each region are confusing.
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