Search Results
Results 451 - 500 of 861
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Rumberger John - - 2005
X-ray computed tomography (CT) is widely available in the world and has the ability to provide high definition, thin section imaging of any body part. In particular, CT over the past decade has been shown in numerous publications to allow for quantitation of coronary calcification, a proven surrogate for coronary ...
Saam Tobias - - 2005
PURPOSE: To provide sample size calculation for the quantitative assessment of carotid atherosclerotic plaque using non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging in multi-center clinical trials. METHODS. As part of a broader double-blind randomized trial of an experimental pharmaceutical agent, 20 asymptomatic placebo-control subjects were recruited from 5 clinical sites for a multi-center ...
O'Malley Sean M - - 2005
Vulnerable plaques are dangerous atherosclerotic lesions that bear a high risk of complications that can lead to heart attacks and strokes. These plaques are known to be chronically inflamed. The vasa vasorum (VV) are microvessels that nourish vessel walls. Proliferation of VV is part of the "response to injury" phenomenon ...
Singh Surendra - - 2005
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this single-use, examiner-blind, two-treatment crossover clinical study was to evaluate the efficacy of a new battery-powered toothbrush (Colgate MicroSonic) relative to that of a currently marketed manual toothbrush (Oral-B Indicator) for the removal of supragingival plaque. This study included the assessment of plaque removal in the ...
Kyriacou Efthyvoulos - - 2005
The aim of this chapter is to summarise the recent advances in ultrasonic plaque characterisation and to evaluate the efficacy of computer aided diagnosis based on neural and statistical classifiers using as input texture and morphological features. Several classifiers like the K-Nearest Neighbour (KNN) the Probabilistic Neural Network (PNN) and ...
Strenk Susan A - - 2005
Accommodation in humans refers to the ability of the lens to change shape in order to bring near objects into focus. Accommodative loss begins during childhood, with symptomatic presbyopia, or presbyopia that affects one's day to day activities, striking during midlife. While symptomatic presbyopia has traditionally been treated with reading ...
Pretty I A - - 2005
OBJECTIVES: To review the established and novel methods of plaque quantification employed in dental research, including a discussion of their merits and to present a new method of planimetrically measuring plaque using light induced fluorescence. METHOD: Quantitative light-fluorescence (QLF) images were acquired from the buccal surfaces of an individual who ...
Jack Clifford R CR - - 2004
One of the cardinal pathologic features of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the formation of senile, or amyloid, plaques. Transgenic mice have been developed that express one or more of the genes responsible for familial AD in humans. Doubly transgenic mice develop "human-like" plaques, providing a mechanism to study amyloid plaque ...
Schroeder S - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of 16 slice computed tomography (CT) in determining plaque morphology and composition in an experimental setting. The results were compared with histopathological analysis as the reference standard. METHODS: Nine human popliteal arteries derived from amputations because of atherosclerotic disease were investigated with multislice spiral ...
Hardoon David R - - 2004
We present a general method using kernel canonical correlation analysis to learn a semantic representation to web images and their associated text. The semantic space provides a common representation and enables a comparison between the text and images. In the experiments, we look at two approaches of retrieving images based ...
Modugno Giovanni Carlo - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: To identify bony labyrinth defects as causing symptoms that might otherwise be difficult to understand. DESIGN: Imaging investigation on cases of lowered vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (VEMP) threshold. SETTING: Academic tertiary case-referral medical center. PATIENTS: One patient with continuous bilateral tinnitus. INTERVENTIONS: High-resolution computed tomography of petrous bone was ...
Glor F P - - 2004
Atherosclerosis is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Its apparent link with wall shear stress (WSS) has led to considerable interest in the in vivo estimation of WSS. Determining WSS by combining medical images with computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations can be performed both with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) ...
D'Attillio Michele - - 2004
This study uses a cross-sectional design to examine the endothelial and inducible nitric oxide synthase (eNOS and iNOS, respectively) levels of gingival tissue. Fifteen subjects, 10 female and 5 male individuals (aged 14.6-21.2 years; mean 17.4 +/- 1.8 years), who needed extraction of the four first premolars for orthodontic reasons ...
Qin Guangming - - 2005
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to visualise experimental atherosclerotic lesions using radiolabelled antisense oligonucleotides (ASONs). METHODS: Atherosclerosis was induced in New Zealand White rabbits fed 1% cholesterol for approximately 60 days. In vivo and ex vivo imaging was performed in atherosclerotic rabbits and normal control rabbits after i.v. ...
Saam T - - 2005
OBJECTIVE: This study evaluates the ability of MRI to quantify all major carotid atherosclerotic plaque components in vivo. METHODS AND RESULTS: Thirty-one subjects scheduled for carotid endarterectomy were imaged with a 1.5T scanner using time-of-flight-, T1-, proton density-, and T2-weighted images. A total of 214 MR imaging locations were matched ...
Lipinski Michael J - - 2004
Identification of high-risk atherosclerotic lesions prone to rupture and thrombosis may greatly decrease the morbidity and mortality associated with atherosclerosis. The development of magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents that specifically target components of the atherosclerotic plaque might enable non-invasive detection of high-risk lesions. This review discusses a variety of molecules ...
Adams Gareth J - - 2004
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can accurately and reproducibly measure the volume of atherosclerotic plaque in human carotid arteries. Atherosclerotic plaques may either progress or regress over time, depending on individual risk factors and treatment regimens. This study was designed to determine if regression or progression of human ...
Mohr Andreas - - 2004
Micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) is a high-resolution, non-destructive tool for two- and three-dimensional imaging and quantification. The ability of this technique to assess atherosclerosis of the carotid artery was evaluated in three human cadaver samples based on the original axial acquisitions, multiplanar reconstructions and volume rendering techniques. Quantitative analysis included the ...
Lima João A C - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Statin therapy reduces adverse outcomes, with a minimal decrease in vessel stenosis. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) noninvasively detects atherosclerotic plaque (AP) reduction. We hypothesized that statin-induced AP regression can be monitored by MRI and detected earlier than previously reported and is significantly associated with its lipid-lowering effect. METHODS AND ...
Lovett J K - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Carotid angiographic plaque surface morphology is a powerful risk factor for stroke and systemic vascular risk. However, the underlying pathology is unclear, and a better understanding is required both to evaluate other forms of carotid imaging and to develop new treatments. Previous studies comparing angiographic plaque surface morphology with ...
Claydon N - - 2004
BACKGROUND AND AIM: There is growing evidence that the new generation of electric toothbrushes are more effective than manual toothbrushes. The primary aim of these studies was to compare, as an indication of the stage of development, the plaque removal properties of a prototype battery powered toothbrush with an established ...
Corot Claire - - 2004
The long blood circulating time and the progressive macrophage uptake in inflammatory tissues of ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide (USPIO) particles are 2 properties of major importance for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) pathologic tissue characterization. This article reviews the proof of principle of applications such as imaging of carotid atherosclerotic plaque, ...
Niwa Yuji - - 2004
The authors investigated calcification in the carotid plaque of patients with carotid stenosis, using three-dimensional CT angiography (3D-CTA) and comparing the images with findings from pathological inspection. Calcification was clearly visualized using volume rendering (VR) images constructed with a refined workstation as well as maximum intensity projection and multiplanar reconstruction ...
Viles-Gonzalez Juan F - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Noninvasive imaging can detect early atherosclerotic disease. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), because of its excellent spatial resolution, is already established as a tool for plaque characterization. Sixteen-slice, multidetector-row computed tomography (MDCT) was recently introduced into the field of cardiac imaging, with promising results for noninvasive angiography. We compared the ...
Trivedi Rikin A - - 2004
Vulnerable plaques have thin fibrous caps overlying large necrotic lipid cores. Recent studies have shown that high-resolution MR imaging can identify these components. We set out to determine whether in vivo high-resolution MRI could quantify this aspect of the vulnerable plaque. Forty consecutive patients scheduled for carotid endarterectomy underwent pre-operative ...
MacNeill Briain D - - 2004
OBJECTIVES: This study was designed to utilize optical coherence tomography (OCT) images of coronary atherosclerotic plaque macrophages to investigate the relationship between macrophage distributions and clinical syndrome. BACKGROUND: The relative significance of focal macrophage infiltration and generalized coronary inflammation for predicting acute coronary events is a currently a source of ...
Lee Sang-Pil - - 2004
The visualization of beta-amyloid plaque deposition in brain, a key feature of Alzheimer's disease (AD), is important for the evaluation of disease progression and the efficacy of therapeutic interventions. In this study, beta-amyloid plaques in the PS/APP transgenic mouse brain, a model of human AD pathology, were detected using MR ...
Grobbee Diederick E - - 2004
Vascular imaging techniques enable identification of atherosclerosis in the sub-clinical phase and allow assessment of interventions to modify disease progression. Angiography has limited utility for tracking the progression of atherosclerosis because of its invasive nature, limited sensitivity for detecting early lesions and relatively low interscan reproducibility. Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS)an electron ...
Itskovich Vitalii V - - 2004
One of the current limitations of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the lack of an objective method to classify plaque components. Here we present a cluster analysis technique that can objectively quantify and classify MR images of atherosclerotic plaques. We obtained three-dimensional (3D) images from 12 human coronary artery specimens ...
Becker Christoph R - - 2004
Assessment of atherosclerotic plaque burden may help to further stratify asymptomatic subjects with an intermediate cardiac event risk according to their conventional risk factors. Coronary calcium screening is a simple and effective method to noninvasively assess the atherosclerotic plaque burden. Standardized quantification of the coronary calcium mass will allow the ...
Weber Marc-André - - 2004
OBJECTIVES: We sought to compare respiratory-gated high-spatial resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and radial MRI with ultra-short echo times with computed tomography (CT) in the diagnosis of asbestos-related pleural disease. METHODS: Twenty-one patients with confirmed long-term asbestos exposure were examined with a CT and a 1.5-T MR unit. High-resolution respiratory-gated ...
Amann-Vesti B R - - 2004
AIM: Wall shear stress (WSS) has been implied in the pathogenesis of restenosis after percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA). Aims of the present study were to calculate WSS in the superficial femoral artery (SFA) from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and from duplex sonography in healthy controls and in patients after PTA ...
Gauvrit Jean-Yves - - 2004
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Carotid angioplasty and stenting, a so far non-validated procedure, may be an alternative to surgery in patients with a high surgical risk. However, it carries also a risk of cerebral embolic events. The purpose of this study was to evaluate tissue signal abnormalities in the brain before ...
Wolf Jeffrey C - - 2004
Although histopathology is routinely employed as a tool for the detection and assessment of xenobiotic-mediated effects in mammals, it is less frequently applied to fish. In part, this is due to a lack of method standardization regarding study design, tissue preservation, tissue sectioning, histopathological evaluation, reporting, and statistical analysis. The ...
Wyttenbach Rolf - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) of severely stenotic peripheral vascular lesions is hampered by a higher restenosis rate. The effects of PTA on vascular wall as well as the effects of the antirestenotic properties of endovascular brachytherapy (EVBT) remain unclear. MRI allows in vivo noninvasive assessment of the vascular effects ...
Denzel C - - 2004
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to compare methods of quantifying calcification of the internal carotid artery. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We examined 92 internal carotid artery endarterectomy specimens. Grey scale median (GSM) values were calculated from optimized B-mode scans. The degree of calcification was assessed using radiographic calcification grading. ...
Trogan Eugene - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: We determined the effects of sustained normocholesterolemia on advanced mouse atherosclerosis and whether changes in plaque size and composition can be detected noninvasively by MRI. METHODS AND RESULTS: Aortic arch segments containing advanced lesions from apolipoprotein E-deficient (apoE-/-) mice (total cholesterol 1281+/-97 mg/dL) were transplanted into syngeneic wild-type (WT; ...
Cappendijk Vincent C - - 2004
PURPOSE: To investigate the performance of high-resolution T1-weighted (T1w) turbo field echo (TFE) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for the identification of the high-risk component intraplaque hemorrhage, which is described in the literature as a troublesome component to detect. MATERIALS AND METHODS: An MRI scan was performed preoperatively on 11 patients ...
Sato Kumi - - 2004
Two styrylbenzene derivatives, (E,E)-1-fluoro-2,5-bis-(3-hydroxycarbonyl-4-hydroxy)styrylbenzene (FSB) and (E,E)-1-bromo-2,5-bis(3-hydroxycarbonyl-4-hydroxy)styrylbenzene-alpha,alpha'-(13)C(2) ([(13)C]BSB), were synthesized for use as a histochemical stain to detect amyloid plaques of Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain sections. An analysis of fluorescence spectra demonstrated that FSB shows approximately twofold fluorescence intensity relative to the conventional styrylbenzene derivative, (E,E)-1-bromo-2,5-bis-(3-hydroxycarbonyl-4-hydroxy)styrylbenzene (BSB). Moreover, FSB was ...
Ogawa Mikako - - 2004
The rupture of atherosclerotic plaques and the subsequent formation of thrombi are the main factors responsible for myocardial and cerebral infarctions. Thus, the detection of vulnerable plaques in atherosclerotic lesions is a desirable goal, and attempts to image these plaques with (18)F-FDG have been made. In the present study, the ...
Tang Dalin - - 2004
A three-dimensional (3D) MRI-based computational model with multicomponent plaque structure and fluid-structure interactions (FSI) is introduced to perform mechanical analysis for human atherosclerotic plaques and identify critical flow and stress/strain conditions which may be related to plaque rupture. Three-dimensional geometry of a human carotid plaque was reconstructed from 3D MR ...
Sirol Marc - - 2004
BACKGROUND: MRI of specific components in atherosclerotic plaque may provide information on plaque stability and its potential to rupture. We evaluated gadofluorine in atherosclerotic rabbits using a new MR sequence that allows plaque detection within 1 hour after injection and assessed enhancement in lipid-rich and non-lipid-rich plaques. METHODS AND RESULTS: ...
Rajaram Venkataraman - - 2004
Diabetes mellitus and the metabolic syndrome (MS) are reaching epidemic proportions in the United States, and cardiovascular disease continues to be the leading cause of death among patients with diabetes. A range of noninvasive screening tools may help reduce the morbidity and mortality of patients with diabetes because of early ...
Yuan Chun - - 2004
The emergence of high-resolution, rapid imaging methods has enabled MRI to noninvasively image the fine internal structure of atherosclerotic artery walls. This capability has, in turn, captured the interest of clinicians, who see it as an opportunity to assess disease severity based on the characteristics of atherosclerotic lesions themselves, rather ...
Nikolaou Konstantin - - 2004
In the present study, we tested the ability of multidetector-row computed tomography (MDCT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to identify and retrospectively characterize atherosclerotic lesions in human ex vivo coronary arteries. Thirteen ex vivo hearts were studied with MDCT and MRI. MDCT-images were obtained with an isotropic voxel size of ...
Rutt Brian K - - 2004
The MR imaging of carotid artery and aortic plaque has undergone significant improvement in the last decade. Early studies utilizing ex vivo specimens and spin echo or fast spin echo imaging, led to the conclusion that T2-weighting was the best single contrast to characterize carotid plaque morphology. On these images, ...
Poduslo Joseph F - - 2004
Molecular imaging is an important new direction in medical diagnosis; however, its success is dependent upon molecular probes that demonstrate selective tissue targeting. We report the design and chemical synthesis of a derivative of human amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptide that is capable of selectively targeting individual amyloid plaques in the brain ...
Sharma Rakesh - - 2004
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: We report in vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) characteristics and histopathology correlation of the thrombus formation in atherosclerosis the rabbit animal model. DESIGN AND METHODS: Atherosclerosis was induced in white male rabbits with vegetable ghee followed oxidized diet. Baseline MRI of atherosclerosis-recruited rabbits was done and later ...
Schäfers Michael - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are enzymes involved in the proteolytic degradation of extracellular matrix. They play an important role in several disease processes, such as inflammation, cancer, and atherosclerosis. METHODS AND RESULTS: In this study, we have used the broad-spectrum MMP inhibitor CGS 27023A to develop the radioligand [123I]I-HO-CGS 27023A ...
Chiesa G - - 2004
The intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) modality has rapidly gained acceptance for the measurement of arterial plaque thickness and for anatomical characterization. In view, however, of the growing interest in the direct assessment of plaque size after therapeutic modalities directly reducing plaque burden, a non-invasive method such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) ...
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