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71.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Primary posterior fossa tumors comprise a large group of neoplasias with variable aggressiveness and short and long-term outcomes. This study aimed to validate the clinical usefulness of a radiologic decision flow chart based on previously published neuroradiologic knowledge for the diagnosis of posterior fossa tumors in children.MATERIALS AND METHODS:A retrospective study was conducted (from January 2013 to October 2019) at 2 pediatric referral centers, Children''s Hospital of Philadelphia, United States, and Great Ormond Street Hospital, United Kingdom. Inclusion criteria were younger than 18 years of age and histologically and molecularly confirmed posterior fossa tumors. Subjects with no available preoperative MR imaging and tumors located primarily in the brain stem were excluded. Imaging characteristics of the tumors were evaluated following a predesigned, step-by-step flow chart. Agreement between readers was tested with the Cohen κ, and each diagnosis was analyzed for accuracy.RESULTS:A total of 148 cases were included, with a median age of 3.4 years (interquartile range, 2.1–6.1 years), and a male/female ratio of 1.24. The predesigned flow chart facilitated identification of pilocytic astrocytoma, ependymoma, and medulloblastoma sonic hedgehog tumors with high sensitivity and specificity. On the basis of the results, the flow chart was adjusted so that it would also be able to better discriminate atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumors and medulloblastoma groups 3 or 4 (sensitivity = 75%–79%; specificity = 92%–99%). Moreover, our adjusted flow chart was useful in ruling out ependymoma, pilocytic astrocytomas, and medulloblastoma sonic hedgehog tumors.CONCLUSIONS:The modified flow chart offers a structured tool to aid in the adjunct diagnosis of pediatric posterior fossa tumors. Our results also establish a useful starting point for prospective clinical studies and for the development of automated algorithms, which may provide precise and adequate diagnostic tools for these tumors in clinical practice.

In the past 10 years, there has been an exponential increase in knowledge of the molecular characteristics of pediatric brain tumors, which was only partially incorporated in the 2016 World Health Organization Classification of Tumors of the Central Nervous System.1 The main update in the 2016 Classification was the introduction of the molecular profile of a tumor as an important factor for predicting different biologic behaviors of entities which, on histology, look very similar or even indistinguishable.2 A typical example is the 4 main groups of medulloblastoma: wingless (WNT), sonic hedgehog (SHH) with or without the p53 mutation, group 3, and group 4. Although they may appear similar on microscopy, these categories have distinct molecular profiles, epidemiology, prognosis, and embryologic origin.3Subsequent to the publication of the 2016 World Health Organization Classification, further studies have identified even more molecular subgroups of medulloblastoma with possible prognostic implications4 and also at least 3 new molecular subgroups of atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor (AT/RT)5 and several subgroups of ependymoma.6 MR imaging shows promise as a technique for differentiating histologic tumors and their molecular subgroups. This capability relies on not only various imaging characteristics but also the location and spatial extension of the tumor, evident on MR imaging, which can be traced to the embryologic origin of the neoplastic cells.5,7-10One approach to the challenge of identifying imaging characteristics of different tumors in children is to use artificial intelligence. Yet despite this exciting innovation, correctly identifying the location of the mass and its possible use as an element for differential diagnosis still requires the expertise of an experienced radiologist. Previously, D''Arco et al11 proposed a flow chart (Fig 1) for the differential diagnosis of posterior fossa tumors in children based on epidemiologic, imaging signal, and location characteristics of the neoplasm. The aims of the current study were the following: 1) to validate, in a retrospective, large cohort of posterior fossa tumors from 2 separate pediatric tertiary centers, the diagnostic accuracy of that flow chart, which visually represents the neuroadiologist''s mental process in making a diagnosis of posterior fossa tumors in children, 2) to describe particular types of posterior fossa lesions that are not correctly diagnosed by the initial flow chart, and 3) to provide an improved, clinically accessible flow chart based on the results.Open in a separate windowFIG 1.Predesigned radiologic flow chart created according to the literature before diagnostic accuracy analysis. The asterisk indicates brain stem tumors excluded from the analysis. Double asterisks indicate relative to gray matter. Modified with permission from D''Arco et al.11  相似文献   
72.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Head motion causes image degradation in brain MR imaging examinations, negatively impacting image quality, especially in pediatric populations. Here, we used a retrospective motion correction technique in children and assessed image quality improvement for 3D MR imaging acquisitions.MATERIALS AND METHODS:We prospectively acquired brain MR imaging at 3T using 3D sequences, T1-weighted MPRAGE, T2-weighted TSE, and FLAIR in 32 unsedated children, including 7 with epilepsy (age range, 2–18 years). We implemented a novel motion correction technique through a modification of k-space data acquisition: Distributed and Incoherent Sample Orders for Reconstruction Deblurring by using Encoding Redundancy (DISORDER). For each participant and technique, we obtained 3 reconstructions as acquired (Aq), after DISORDER motion correction (Di), and Di with additional outlier rejection (DiOut). We analyzed 288 images quantitatively, measuring 2 objective no-reference image quality metrics: gradient entropy (GE) and MPRAGE white matter (WM) homogeneity. As a qualitative metric, we presented blinded and randomized images to 2 expert neuroradiologists who scored them for clinical readability.RESULTS:Both image quality metrics improved after motion correction for all modalities, and improvement correlated with the amount of intrascan motion. Neuroradiologists also considered the motion corrected images as of higher quality (Wilcoxon z = −3.164 for MPRAGE; z = −2.066 for TSE; z = −2.645 for FLAIR; all P < .05).CONCLUSIONS:Retrospective image motion correction with DISORDER increased image quality both from an objective and qualitative perspective. In 75% of sessions, at least 1 sequence was improved by this approach, indicating the benefit of this technique in unsedated children for both clinical and research environments.

Head motion is a common cause of image degradation in brain MR imaging. Motion artifacts negatively impact MR image quality and therefore radiologists’ capacity to read the images, ultimately affecting patient clinical care.1 Motion artifacts are more common in noncompliant patients,2 but even in compliant adults, intrascan movement is reported in at least 10% of cases.3 For children who require high-resolution MR images, obtaining optimal image quality can be challenging, owing to the requirement to stay still over long durations needed for acquisition.4 Sedation can be an option, but it carries higher risks, costs, and preparation and recovery time.5In conditions such as intractable focal epilepsy, identification of an epileptogenic lesion is clinically important to guide surgical treatment. However, these lesions can be visually subtle, particularly in children in whom subtle cortical dysplasias are more common.6 Dedicated epilepsy MR imaging protocols use high-resolution 3D sequences to allow better cortical definition and free reformatting of orientation but involve acquisition times in the order of minutes, so data collection becomes more sensitive to motion.7For children in particular, multiple strategies are available for minimizing motion during MR examinations. Collaboration with play specialists using mock scanners and training or projecting a cartoon are good approaches to reduce anxiety.8,9 These tools are not always available in clinical radiology and, even with these strategies, motion can still be an issue.10 Different scanning approaches to correct for intrascan motion have been proposed. Broadly, prospective methods track head motion in real time and modify the acquisition directions accordingly.11 These approaches are applicable to a wide range of sequences but require optical systems with external tracking markers, sometimes uncomfortable or impractical, and extra setup can ultimately result in longer examinations. Furthermore, these approaches may also not be robust to continuous motion.11-13 Retrospective techniques have also been proposed, in some cases relying on imaging navigators that are not compatible with all standard sequences or contrasts.12Here, we use a more general retrospective motion correction technique: Distributed and Incoherent Sample Orders for Reconstruction Deblurring by using Encoding Redundancy (DISORDER). In this method, k-space samples are reordered to enable retrospective motion correction during image reconstruction.14 Our hypothesis is that DISORDER improves clinical MR imaging quality and readability. To assess its use for clinical sequences, we acquired a dedicated epilepsy MR imaging protocol in 32 children across a wide age range. We used both objective image quality metrics and expert neuroradiologist ratings to evaluate the outcome after motion correction.  相似文献   
73.
Background/ObjectiveOccurrence of post-dural puncture headache (PDPH) after diagnostic lumbar puncture (LP) for idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) may seem very unlikely in clinical practice. Nevertheless, it has been suggested by several studies, mainly in sub-group analyses. We aimed to evaluate the prevalence of PDPH in an IIH population and determine any eventual predictive factors of PDPH occurrence.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective multiple-center observational study. All newly diagnosed IIH patients who met the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD-3) or the Dandy modified criteria were included from three different French hospitals. They all underwent LP following the same process with the same type of needle. We recorded PDPH occurring within five days after LP, as defined by ICHD-3 criteria.ResultsSeventy-four IIH patients were recruited, of whom 23 (31%) presented with PDPH. Neither classical risk factors for PDPH such as body mass index, age or gender, nor cerebrospinal fluid opening pressure, or specific IIH features were associated with occurrence of PDPH.ConclusionPDPH can occur after LP in IIH patients. Clinicians should be aware of this possible event during the IIH diagnosis assessment and should not automatically reconsider IIH diagnosis. PDPH prevention using an atraumatic needle and dedicated PDPH treatment seem relevant in IIH patients.  相似文献   
74.
AimsOrgan preservation, an important goal in the treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), may include induction chemotherapy and cisplatin with radiation therapy (CRT). To our knowledge, no reports have directly compared the impact of induction chemotherapy with that of CRT on health-related quality of life (HRQOL).Materials and methodsIn a phase II trial, we assessed the HRQOL of patients treated with induction chemotherapy followed by CRT. Eligible patients had stage III–IV HNSCC. HRQOL questionnaires were administered at baseline, the end of induction (EOI), the end of CRT (EOCRT) and after CRT. Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy (FACT version 4) assessed HRQOL. We carried out a comparison of changes in HRQOL from baseline to EOI and from EOI to EOCRT. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01566435).ResultsThirty patients were enrolled in the study. Most HRQOL questionnaires were completed (88%). The mean total FACT scores did not differ from baseline to EOI (general: 83.8 versus 79.1, P = 0.08; head and neck: 109.7 versus 105.8, P = 0.33; Total Outcome Index: 69.7 versus 62.3, P = 0.03; respectively, using P ≤ 0.01 to adjust for multiple simultaneous tests of differences). However, total FACT scores significantly worsened from EOI to EOCRT (79.1 versus 62.3, P = 0.01; 105.8 versus 74.2, P < 0.01; 62.3 versus 34.2, P = 0.01; respectively). Within domains, the head and neck cancer subscale score did not differ from baseline to EOI (median 28.5 versus 27.0, P = 0.69), but significantly worsened from EOI to EOCRT (27.0 versus 9.5, P < 0.01). Swallowing, oral pain and voice quality improved from baseline to EOI, but worsened from EOI to EOCRT. Physical and functional scores worsened from baseline to EOI and from EOI to EOCRT. The emotional well-being score improved from baseline to EOI but worsened from EOI to EOCRT.ConclusionsOverall, HRQOL did not significantly change from baseline to EOI but dramatically worsened from EOI to EOCRT.  相似文献   
75.

Purpose

To investigate the preoperative use of combination metformin and statin versus monotherapy on biochemical recurrence (BCR) after radical prostatectomy (RP) in diabetic men.

Patients and Methods

Data of 843 diabetic men who underwent RP were stratified on the basis of preoperative use of no drug or of metformin, statin, or both. Multivariable Cox models were used to test the association between treatment and BCR. In a secondary analysis, models were stratified by race and body mass index (BMI) and further adjusted for glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c).

Results

A total of 259 men (31%) received statin therapy, 94 (11%) metformin, 307 (36%) metformin + statin, and 183 (22%) neither. Five-year BCR-free survival rates were 75% in metformin only versus 75% in metformin + statin versus 60% in statin versus 68% in no drug groups (log-rank, P = .003). On multivariable analysis, preoperative statin use was associated with increased BCR risk versus men receiving neither drug (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.84; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.28-2.64). Metformin alone (HR 0.88; 95% CI, 0.53-1.47) and metformin + statin (HR 0.88; 95% CI, 0.58-1.33) were unrelated to BCR risks. In secondary analysis, the association between statin use and higher BCR risk was similar regardless of race, but was stronger among men with BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 (HR 3.12; 95% CI, 1.70-5.72). These results were largely unchanged after adjusting for HbA1c.

Conclusion

Among diabetic men undergoing RP, preoperative statin use was associated with worse BCR risk, especially among men with a high BMI, but these associations may be mitigated by concomitant use of metformin. If validated in future findings, research is needed to understand the basis for these associations.  相似文献   
76.
ABSTRACT

Purpose: To investigate the link between treatment with CTLA-4 and PD-1 checkpoint blockade inhibitors and the development of noninfectious uveitis.

Methods: A survey was distributed to uveitis specialists to identify patients who developed uveitis while receiving either PD-1 inhibitors pembrolizumab and nivolumab; PD-L1 inhibitors atezolizumab, avelumab, and durvalumab; or the CTLA-4 inhibitor ipilimumab.

Results: Fifteen patients from seven institutions were identified. The most common cancer diagnosis (13/15) was malignant melanoma. Fourteen patients had a new uveitis diagnosis following checkpoint blockade administration (six anterior uveitis, six panuveitis, one posterior uveitis, one anterior/intermediate combined); one patient developed optic neuritis. Uveitis was diagnosed within 6 months after drug initiation for 11/12 patients (median 63 days). Corticosteroid treatment was effective for most patients, although two patients had permanent loss of vision.

Conclusions: Patients on checkpoint inhibitor therapy should be educated to seek care if they develop ocular symptoms, and prompt referral to specialists should be incorporated into oncology protocols.  相似文献   
77.
Abstract

Background: Opioid overdose deaths constitute a public health crisis in the United States. Strategies for reducing opioid-related harm are underutilized due in part to clinicians’ low knowledge about harm reduction theory and limited preparedness to prescribe naloxone. Educational interventions are needed to improve knowledge and attitudes about, and preparedness to address, opioid overdoses among medical students. Methods: Informed by the Department of Veterans Affairs’ Overdose Education and Naloxone Distribution (OEND) program and narrative medicine, we developed and led a mandatory workshop on harm reduction for clerkship medical students. Using validated scales, we assessed students’ knowledge and attitudes about, and preparedness to address, opioid overdoses before the workshop and 6 weeks after. Results: Of 75 participating students from February through December 2017, 55 (73%) completed pre-workshop and 38 (51%) completed both pre- and post-workshop surveys. At baseline, 40 (73%) encountered patients with perceived at-risk opioid use in the previous 6 weeks, but only 11 (20%) recalled their teams prescribing naloxone for overdose prevention. Among those completing both surveys, knowledge about and preparedness to prevent overdose showed large improvement (Cohen’s d?=?0.85, P?<?.001; Cohen’s d?=?1.24, P?<?.001, respectively) and attitudes showed moderate improvement (Cohen’s d?=?0.32, P = .04). Discussion: Educational interventions grounded in harm reduction theory can increase students’ knowledge and attitudes about, and preparedness to address, opioid overdoses.  相似文献   
78.
ABSTRACT

Purpose

The aim of the present study was to assess the association between levels of physical activity (PA) and the presence of cataracts in people aged 15–69 years residing in Spain.  相似文献   
79.
Electrocatalytic generation of H2 is challenging in neutral pH water, where high catalytic currents for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) are particularly sensitive to the proton source and solution characteristics. A tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (TRIS) solution at pH 7 with a [2Fe-2S]-metallopolymer electrocatalyst gave catalytic current densities around two orders of magnitude greater than either a more conventional sodium phosphate solution or a potassium chloride (KCl) electrolyte solution. For a planar polycrystalline Pt disk electrode, a TRIS solution at pH 7 increased the catalytic current densities for H2 generation by 50 mA/cm2 at current densities over 100 mA/cm2 compared to a sodium phosphate solution. As a special feature of this study, TRIS is acting not only as the primary source of protons and the buffer of the pH, but the protonated TRIS ([TRIS-H]+) is also the sole cation of the electrolyte. A species that is simultaneously the proton source, buffer, and sole electrolyte is termed a protic buffer electrolyte (PBE). The structure–activity relationships of the TRIS PBE that increase the HER rate of the metallopolymer and platinum catalysts are discussed. These results suggest that appropriately designed PBEs can improve HER rates of any homogeneous or heterogeneous electrocatalyst system. General guidelines for selecting a PBE to improve the catalytic current density of HER systems are offered.

Molecular hydrogen (H2), a clean-burning and energy-dense fuel source, has been widely discussed as an attractive way to store intermittent energy from solar and wind through water electrolysis (1, 2). Current commercial electrolyzers can be separated into two categories based on their operating pH. The first are acidic polymer electrolyte membrane electrolyzers that work best with rare and expensive platinum-based electrocatalysts for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) (3). The second are strongly alkaline electrolyzers that suffer from caustic basic reaction conditions (4). Neutral pH conditions with inexpensive catalysts composed of Earth-abundant elements are a target for practical solar-to-hydrogen fuel devices due to lower cost and fewer safety concerns (5), but achieving fast rates with mild overpotentials under neutral conditions remains a challenge (612). In the pH range from 5 to 9, the electrocatalytic activity of platinum (Pt) itself does not conform to the expected thermodynamic potential shift with pH dependence of −59 mV/pH (13). This is due to the low concentration of the hydronium ion in this pH range and a transition to water as the primary reactant, which has a higher thermodynamic requirement for hydrogen evolution (13). Studies of electrocatalysts using buffers to maintain the pH in this range and ionic salts such as potassium chloride (KCl) to provide ionic strength to ensure high solution conductivity have shown that the buffer can aid the HER activity, presumably by acting as a proton donor (6, 1418). To extend the scope of water-soluble electrocatalysts, biopolymers and bioinspired metallopolymer catalysts have also been studied (7, 12, 1726). Bren and coworkers recently reported particularly enlightening studies of the effects of buffer pKa and structure on the mechanism of the hydrogen evolution reaction for cobalt minienzymes (17, 18).We recently reported a new metallopolymer catalyst system built around a customized [2Fe-2S] catalyst site with a bridging aryldithiolato ligand which exhibits remarkable catalytic activity, air stability, and chemical stability (21). The electrocatalytic mechanism of the [2Fe-2S] catalysts with aryldithiolato ligands is known from previous studies and these catalysts operate at rates of 105 s−1 and faster (2730). The readily synthesized and water-soluble metallopolymer composed of tertiary amine side-chain groups, PDMAEMA-g-[2Fe-2S] (Fig. 1), approached the current density of Pt operating in neutral water under the same conditions and matched the Faradaic yield (97 ± 3%) (21). Although the detailed structural and mechanistic causality of these profound improvements for these metallopolymer electrocatalysts remain subjects of study, the nature of this molecular system is ideal for studying solution effects on the HER reaction at neutral pH for complexes that are normally insoluble in water. In the course of characterizing these electrocatalysts, solutions containing tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (TRIS) at pH 7 were discovered to be exceptionally advantageous to the catalytic rate. In contrast to the few previous studies of TRIS buffer with electrocatalysts (14, 15, 18), we utilized TRIS at a high concentration. At pH 7, TRIS is sufficiently in the cationic protonated form that additional electrolyte such as KCl is not needed for conductance. This important distinction from conventional studies allows TRIS to simultaneously play the roles of pH buffer, proton source, and sole electrolyte. There is precedence in employing buffers in a manner in which they are the sole electrolyte (7, 3134). Referring to such species simply as a “buffer” or as an “electrolyte” is inadequate in representing the three functions including proton source. For the purposes of this paper we term a species that serves all three functions a protic buffer electrolyte (PBE). In the following discussion, a TRIS PBE solution is one in which [TRIS-H]+Cl is the sole electrolyte and the cation is a proton source, and a sodium phosphate PBE solution is one in which Na+[H2PO4] is the sole electrolyte and the anion is a proton source.Open in a separate windowFig. 1.(A) Depiction of the 2e electrocatalytic HER with POEGMA-g-[2Fe-2S] and/or PDMAEMA-g-[2Fe-2S] metallopolymers using TRIS or sodium phosphate protic buffer electrolytes at pH 7. (B) Image of POEGMA-g-[2Fe-2S] with MW = 14,216 grown in silico. The [2Fe-2S] active site is in the center of the polymer, blue represents the polymer backbone, and the rest are the oligo(ethylene glycol) side chains. See SI Appendix for the details of modeling and a larger image.One of the key unanswered questions for these new catalyst systems is whether the metallopolymer composition (i.e., amine side-chain groups) or the PBEs are more important to afford this outstanding catalytic activity. Herein we study the effects of PBEs by comparing the HER performances of a standard platinum catalyst and a [2Fe-2S] metallopolymer catalyst in TRIS PBE solutions, sodium phosphate PBE solutions, and a KCl electrolyte solution without a PBE. For this study, nonionic water-soluble metallopolymers were used, which were made using oligo(ethylene glycol) side-chain groups on the polymer to avoid the possibility of contributing effects of the protonated amino groups of PDMAEMA-g-[2Fe-2S] referred to earlier. The metallopolymer catalyst used in this work is designated as POEGMA-g-[2Fe-2S] (Fig. 1). We previously reported that this water-soluble metallopolymer was largely inactive for H2 electrocatalysis at neutral pH in phosphate buffer (22). The current findings suggest that the use of electrolytes composed of inexpensive cationic organic proton donors can be readily applied to any homogeneous or heterogeneous electrocatalyst system as a facile means to enhance HER activity.  相似文献   
80.
Abstract

Cardiac troponins (cTn) are currently the standard of care for the diagnosis of acute coronary syndromes (ACS) in patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with chest pain (CP). However, their plasma kinetics necessitate a prolonged ED stay or overnight hospital admission, especially in those presenting early after CP onset. Moreover, ruling out ACS in low-risk patients requires prolonged ED observation or overnight hospital admission to allow serial measurements of c-Tn, adding cost. Heart-type fatty acid-binding protein (H-FABP) is a novel marker of myocardial injury with putative advantages over cTn. Being present in abundance in the myocellular cytoplasm, it is released rapidly (<1?h) after the onset of myocardial injury and could potentially play an important role in both earlier diagnosis of high-risk patients presenting early after CP onset, as well as in risk-stratifying low-risk patients rapidly. Like cTn, H-FABP also has a potential role as a prognostic marker in other conditions where the myocardial injury occurs, such as acute congestive heart failure (CHF) and acute pulmonary embolism (PE). This review provides an overview of the evidence examining the role of H-FABP in early diagnosis and risk stratification of patients with CP and in non-ACS conditions associated with myocardial injury.
  • Key messages
  • Heart-type fatty acid-binding protein is a biomarker that is elevated early in myocardial injury

  • The routine use in the emergency department complements the use of troponins in ruling out acute coronary syndromes in patients presenting early with chest pain

  • It also is useful in risk stratifying patients with other conditions such as heart failure and acute pulmonary embolism.

  相似文献   
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