AJR. American journal of roentgenology
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AJR Am J Roentgenol · May 2009
Radiologist-supervised ketamine sedation for solid organ biopsies in children and adolescents.
Pediatric interventional radiologists are frequently challenged when faced with organ biopsies. Because of the need for patient immobility and the potential risk of morbidity with patient movement during biopsies, many radiologists prefer general anesthesia to sedation. We present our experience with radiologist-supervised ketamine sedation in pediatric patients undergoing renal and hepatic biopsies. ⋯ Interventional radiologists performing solid organ biopsies in the pediatric population often use general anesthesia to ensure immobility, adequate analgesia, and safe conditions. Our experience suggests that interventional radiologists may supervise a nurse-administered ketamine protocol to provide safe, effective analgesia and sedation for liver and renal biopsies.
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AJR Am J Roentgenol · May 2009
Interaction between academic radiology and the news media: a potentially powerful and unpredictable process--five stories.
Although articles have been published describing the relationship between news reports and the general medical literature, to our knowledge little has been published describing the relationship between radiology publications and news coverage. We present five instances of news stories centered on radiology publications or abstracts of presentations at national meetings and the effect of the media coverage within the medical community. ⋯ The five examples show that news coverage can have a dramatic effect on advancing research findings and public health information published in radiology journals. Even when news coverage is inaccurate or sensationalized, the attention of the general public can drive change not only generally in medicine but also specifically in radiology.
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AJR Am J Roentgenol · Apr 2009
Cumulative radiation exposure and cancer risk estimates in emergency department patients undergoing repeat or multiple CT.
The purpose of our study was to define a conservative estimate of the number of patients undergoing repeat or multiple emergency department CT studies and to quantify their cumulative CT radiation doses and lifetime attributable risk of developing cancer. ⋯ A small proportion (1.9%) of emergency department patients undergoing CT of the neck, chest, abdomen, or pelvis have high cumulative rates of multiple or repeat imaging. Collectively, this patient subgroup may have a heightened risk of developing cancer from cumulative CT radiation exposure.
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AJR Am J Roentgenol · Apr 2009
PET/CT for the characterization of adrenal masses in patients with cancer: qualitative versus quantitative accuracy in 150 consecutive patients.
The objective of our study was to evaluate a large cohort of patients with PET/CT to determine whether qualitative (visual) assessment, quantitative standardized uptake value (SUV), or standardized uptake ratio (SUR) techniques should be used when attempting to characterize adrenal masses in patients with cancer. ⋯ PET/CT is a highly accurate method for differentiating benign from malignant adrenal masses particularly when using qualitative, rather than quantitative, PET data. The routine use of quantitative mean or maximal SUV or SUR data may be unnecessary. Occasional benign lesions do show mild to moderate increased FDG uptake compared with that of the liver and may mimic some malignant lesions. Without evidence that these lesions are benign by unenhanced CT densitometry or adrenal mass stability or growth from previous CT scans, we recommend that these lesions be characterized using contrast-enhanced washout tests and that if those tests are inconclusive, using percutaneous biopsy if early lesion characterization is mandatory.
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AJR Am J Roentgenol · Apr 2009
Fluoroscopic and sonographic guidance to place peritoneal catheters: how we do it.
The purpose of this article is to detail a percutaneous approach to placing peritoneal catheters using sonographic and fluoroscopic guidance. Fluoroscopic-assisted placement of these catheters has been previously described in the literature. We emphasize the use of additional sonographic guidance, including color Doppler sonography, to determine the safest puncture site and to guide the initial needle puncture to avoid bowel perforation and injury to the epigastric artery. ⋯ Imaging-guided-that is, sonography plus fluoroscopy-percutaneous placement of peritoneal catheters is a safe, minimally invasive, and effective alternative to blind or open surgical placement. The use of sonographic guidance together with fluoroscopic assistance makes placement of peritoneal catheters a safer and effective alternative to blind or open surgical placement.