Ultrasound in medicine & biology
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Ultrasound Med Biol · Jun 2015
Efficacy of contrast-enhanced ultrasound washout rate in predicting hepatocellular carcinoma differentiation.
The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the efficacy of contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) washout rate in predicting hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) differentiation. Two hundred seventy-one patients underwent liver resection for HCC between April 2008 and December 2012 after being examined by CEUS using the contrast agent SonoVue with a low mechanical index (<0.1) in a routine procedure. Contrast agent washout rates obtained from video images were divided into four categories from slow to fast: WR1 = no washout in all phases (slowest); WR2 = washout after 120 s from contrast injection (late-phase washout); WR3 = washout between 41 and 120 s from contrast injection (portal venous washout); WR4 = washout before 40 s from contrast injection (fastest washout rate). ⋯ At the cutoff point of WR4, CEUS based on washout rate performed poorly in distinguishing poorly differentiated from moderately and well-differentiated HCCs, with a sensitivity, specificity and accuracy (area under the curve) of 24%, 97% and 0.68, respectively. However, at the cutoff point of WR2, the sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of CEUS in differentiating well-differentiated HCC from other HCCs were significantly better: 98%, 78% and 0.96, respectively. Thus, CEUS washout rate may have a role in identifying patients with well-differentiated HCC.
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Ultrasound Med Biol · Jun 2015
Effect of cervical sympathetic block on optic nerve sheath diameter measured by ultrasonography.
Optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) measurement using ocular ultrasonography was introduced as a non-invasive technique to assess intracranial pressure. We investigated changes in ONSD after cervical sympathetic block (CSB). Ultrasound-guided CSB was performed with a lateral approach at the C6 level in 35 patients. ⋯ A comparison of ONSDs between the blocked and non-blocked sides revealed that these values did not differ significantly between sides at baseline and after CSB. On the basis of these preliminary data, CSB caused an increase in ONSD in patients without intracranial pathology or neurologic disorders. Further larger and controlled studies of the effect of CSB on intracranial pressure in humans are needed to confirm our findings.