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Medical Physics Apr 2022Diffusion MRI has enormous potential and utility in the evaluation of various abdominal and pelvic disease processes including cancer and noncancer imaging of the liver,...
Diffusion MRI has enormous potential and utility in the evaluation of various abdominal and pelvic disease processes including cancer and noncancer imaging of the liver, prostate, and other organs. Quantitative diffusion MRI is based on acquisitions with multiple diffusion encodings followed by quantitative mapping of diffusion parameters that are sensitive to tissue microstructure. Compared to qualitative diffusion-weighted MRI, quantitative diffusion MRI can improve standardization of tissue characterization as needed for disease detection, staging, and treatment monitoring. However, similar to many other quantitative MRI methods, diffusion MRI faces multiple challenges including acquisition artifacts, signal modeling limitations, and biological variability. In abdominal and pelvic diffusion MRI, technical acquisition challenges include physiologic motion (respiratory, peristaltic, and pulsatile), image distortions, and low signal-to-noise ratio. If unaddressed, these challenges lead to poor technical performance (bias and precision) and clinical outcomes of quantitative diffusion MRI. Emerging and novel technical developments seek to address these challenges and may enable reliable quantitative diffusion MRI of the abdomen and pelvis. Through systematic validation in phantoms, volunteers, and patients, including multicenter studies to assess reproducibility, these emerging techniques may finally demonstrate the potential of quantitative diffusion MRI for abdominal and pelvic imaging applications.
Topics: Abdomen; Artifacts; Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Humans; Male; Pelvis; Reproducibility of Results
PubMed: 34554579
DOI: 10.1002/mp.15246 -
Acta Obstetricia Et Gynecologica... Jan 2023To determine whether a pelvis is wide enough for spontaneous delivery has long been the subject of obstetric research. A number of variables have been proposed as... (Observational Study)
Observational Study
INTRODUCTION
To determine whether a pelvis is wide enough for spontaneous delivery has long been the subject of obstetric research. A number of variables have been proposed as predictors, all with limited accuracy. In this study, we use a novel three-dimensional (3D) method to measure the female pelvis and assess which pelvic features influence birth mode. We compare the 3D pelvic morphology of women who delivered vaginally, women who had cesarean sections, and nulliparous women. The aim of this study is to identify differences in pelvic morphology between these groups.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
This observational study included women aged 50 years and older who underwent a CT scan of the pelvis for any medical indication. We recorded biometric data including height, weight, and age, and obtained the obstetric history. The bony pelvis was extracted from the CT scans and reconstructed in three dimensions. By placing 274 landmarks on each surface model, the pelvises were measured in detail. The pelvic inlet was measured using 32 landmarks. The trial was registered at the German Clinical Trials Register DRKS (DRKS00017690).
RESULTS
For this study, 206 women were screened. Exclusion criteria were foreign material in the bony pelvis, unknown birth mode, and exclusively preterm births. Women who had both a vaginal birth and a cesarean section were excluded from the group comparison. We compared the pelvises of 177 women between three groups divided by obstetric history: vaginal births only (n = 118), cesarean sections only (n = 21), and nulliparous women (n = 38). The inlet area was significantly smaller in the cesarean section group (mean = 126.3 cm ) compared with the vaginal birth group (mean = 134.9 cm , p = 0.002). The nulliparous women were used as a control group: there was no statistically significant difference in pelvic inlet area between the nulliparous and vaginal birth groups.
CONCLUSIONS
By placing 274 landmarks on a pelvis reconstructed in 3D, a very precise measurement of the morphology of the pelvis is possible. We identified a significant difference in pelvic inlet area between women with vaginal delivery and those with cesarean section. A unique feature of this study is the method of measurement of the bony pelvis that goes beyond linear distance measurements as used in previous pelvimetric studies.
Topics: Infant, Newborn; Female; Pregnancy; Humans; Middle Aged; Aged; Cesarean Section; Bays; Parturition; Pelvis; Delivery, Obstetric; Pelvimetry
PubMed: 36320156
DOI: 10.1111/aogs.14478 -
Radiation Protection Dosimetry Feb 2024Projection radiography is the most common radiological modality, and radiation safety of it concerns both radiation workers and the public. We measured and generated a...
Projection radiography is the most common radiological modality, and radiation safety of it concerns both radiation workers and the public. We measured and generated a series of scattered radiation maps for projection radiography and estimated effective doses of the supporting person during exposure. Measured adult patient protocols included chest posterior-anterior, chest lateral, pelvis anterior-posterior (AP), abdomen AP and bedside chest AP. Maps concretise spatial distribution and the scattered radiation dose rates in different imaging protocols. Highest and lowest rates were measured in abdomen AP and bedside chest AP protocols, respectively. The effective dose of supporting person in abdomen AP examination at distance of 0.5 m was 300 nSv and in bedside supine chest AP examination at distance of 0.7 m was 0.5 nSv. The estimated annual effective dose of emergency unit radiographer was 0.11 mSv. The obtained effective dose values are small compared to annual dose limits of radiation workers and the public.
Topics: Adult; Humans; X-Rays; Radiation Dosage; Radiography; Pelvis; Physical Examination; Radiography, Thoracic
PubMed: 37939724
DOI: 10.1093/rpd/ncad275 -
Journal of Orthopaedics and... Oct 2021Sciatic nerve injury is an uncommon but potentially devastating complication in hip and pelvis surgery. Intraoperative nerve monitoring (IONM) was applied since the...
INTRODUCTION
Sciatic nerve injury is an uncommon but potentially devastating complication in hip and pelvis surgery. Intraoperative nerve monitoring (IONM) was applied since the seventies in neurosurgery and spine surgery. Nowadays, IONM has gained popularity in other surgical specialities including orthopaedic and trauma surgery. Aim of this systematic review is to resume the literature evidences about the effectiveness of intraoperative monitoring of sciatic nerve during pelvic and hip surgery.
METHODS
Two reviewers (GC and MD) independently identified studies by a systematic search of PubMed and Google Scholar from inception of database to 10 January 2021. Inclusion criteria were: (a) English written papers, (b) use of any type of intraoperative nerve monitoring during traumatic or elective pelvic and hip surgery, (c) comparison of the outcomes between patients who underwent nerve monitoring and patient who underwent standard procedures, (d) all study types including case reports. The present review was conducted in accordance with the 2009 PRISMA statement.
RESULTS
The literature search produced 224 papers from PubMed and 594 from Google Scholar, with a total amount of 818 papers. The two reviewer excluded 683 papers by title or duplicates. Of the 135 remaining, 72 were excluded after reading the abstract, and 31 by reading the full text. Thus, 32 papers were finally included in the review.
CONCLUSIONS
The use of IONM during hip and pelvis surgery is debated. The review results are insufficient to support the routine use of IONM in hip and pelvis surgery. The different IONM techniques have peculiar advantages and disadvantages and differences in sensitivity and specificity without clear evidence of superiority for any. Results from different studies and different interventions are often in contrast. However, there is general agreement in recognizing a role for IONM to define the critical maneuvers, positions or pathologies that could lead to sciatic nerve intraoperative damage.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE
Level 2.
Topics: Humans; Monitoring, Intraoperative; Neurosurgical Procedures; Orthopedics; Pelvis; Retrospective Studies
PubMed: 34647237
DOI: 10.1186/s10195-021-00605-8 -
Journal of Medical Radiation Sciences Jun 2024Concerns regarding the adverse consequences of radiation have increased due to the expanded application of computed tomography (CT) in medical practice. Certain studies...
Introducing fitting models for estimating age-specific dose and effective dose in paediatric patients undergoing head, chest and abdomen-pelvis imaging protocols: a patient study.
INTRODUCTION
Concerns regarding the adverse consequences of radiation have increased due to the expanded application of computed tomography (CT) in medical practice. Certain studies have indicated that the radiation dosage depends on the anatomical region, the imaging technique employed and patient-specific variables. The aim of this study is to present fitting models for the estimation of age-specific dose estimates (ASDE), in the same direction of size-specific dose estimates, and effective doses based on patient age, gender and the type of CT examination used in paediatric head, chest and abdomen-pelvis imaging.
METHODS
A total of 583 paediatric patients were included in the study. Radiometric data were gathered from DICOM files. The patients were categorised into five distinct groups (under 15 years of age), and the effective dose, organ dose and ASDE were computed for the CT examinations involving the head, chest and abdomen-pelvis. Finally, the best fitting models were presented for estimation of ASDE and effective doses based on patient age, gender and the type of examination.
RESULTS
The ASDE in head, chest, and abdomen-pelvis CT examinations increases with increasing age. As age increases, the effective dose in head and abdomen-pelvis CT scans decreased. However, for chest scans, the effective dose initially showed a decreasing trend until the first year of life; after that, it increases in correlation with age.
CONCLUSIONS
Based on the presented fitting model for the ASDE, these CT scan quantities depend on factors such as patient age and the type of CT examination. For the effective dose, the gender was also included in the fitting model. By utilising the information about the scan type, region and age, it becomes feasible to estimate the ASDE and effective dose using the models provided in this study.
Topics: Humans; Child; Radiation Dosage; Female; Male; Adolescent; Child, Preschool; Infant; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Head; Pelvis; Abdomen; Thorax; Age Factors; Infant, Newborn; Radiography, Thoracic; Radiography, Abdominal
PubMed: 38454637
DOI: 10.1002/jmrs.772 -
Journal of Digital Imaging Feb 2023Since radiology reports needed for clinical practice and research are written and stored in free-text narrations, extraction of relative information for further analysis...
Since radiology reports needed for clinical practice and research are written and stored in free-text narrations, extraction of relative information for further analysis is difficult. In these circumstances, natural language processing (NLP) techniques can facilitate automatic information extraction and transformation of free-text formats to structured data. In recent years, deep learning (DL)-based models have been adapted for NLP experiments with promising results. Despite the significant potential of DL models based on artificial neural networks (ANN) and convolutional neural networks (CNN), the models face some limitations to implement in clinical practice. Transformers, another new DL architecture, have been increasingly applied to improve the process. Therefore, in this study, we propose a transformer-based fine-grained named entity recognition (NER) architecture for clinical information extraction. We collected 88 abdominopelvic sonography reports in free-text formats and annotated them based on our developed information schema. The text-to-text transfer transformer model (T5) and Scifive, a pre-trained domain-specific adaptation of the T5 model, were applied for fine-tuning to extract entities and relations and transform the input into a structured format. Our transformer-based model in this study outperformed previously applied approaches such as ANN and CNN models based on ROUGE-1, ROUGE-2, ROUGE-L, and BLEU scores of 0.816, 0.668, 0.528, and 0.743, respectively, while providing an interpretable structured report.
Topics: Humans; Abdomen; Deep Learning; Information Storage and Retrieval; Medical Records Systems, Computerized; Natural Language Processing; Neural Networks, Computer; Pelvis; Radiology; Ultrasonography
PubMed: 36002778
DOI: 10.1007/s10278-022-00692-x -
International Braz J Urol : Official... 2023The objective of the present study is to evaluate the anatomy of the inferior hypogastric plexus, correlating it with urological pathologies, imaging exams and surgeries... (Review)
Review
OBJECTIVE
The objective of the present study is to evaluate the anatomy of the inferior hypogastric plexus, correlating it with urological pathologies, imaging exams and surgeries of the female pelvis, especially for treatment of endometriosis.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
We carried out a review about the anatomy of the inferior hypogastric plexus in the female pelvis. We analyzed papers published in the past 20 years in the databases of Pubmed, Embase and Scielo, and we included only papers in English and excluded case reports, editorials, and opinions of specialists. We also studied two human fixed female corpses and microsurgical dissection material with a stereoscopic magnifying glass with 2.5x magnification.
RESULTS
Classical anatomical studies provide few details of the morphology of the inferior hypogastric plexus (IHP) or the location and nature of the associated nerves. The fusion of pelvic splanchnic nerves, sacral splanchnic nerves, and superior hypogastric plexus together with visceral afferent fibers form the IHP. The surgeon's precise knowledge of the anatomical relationship between the hypogastric nerve and the uterosacral ligament is essential to reduce the risk of complications and postoperative morbidity of patients surgically treated for deep infiltrative endometriosis involving the uterosacral ligament.
CONCLUSION
Accurate knowledge of the innervation of the female pelvis is of fundamental importance for prevention of possible injuries and voiding dysfunctions as well as the evacuation mechanism in the postoperative period. Imaging exams such as nuclear magnetic resonance are interesting tools for more accurate visualization of the distribution of the hypogastric plexus in the female pelvis.
Topics: Humans; Female; Hypogastric Plexus; Endometriosis; Pelvis; Uterus; Cadaver
PubMed: 36515618
DOI: 10.1590/S1677-5538.IBJU.2022.9980 -
The British Journal of Radiology Oct 2022To describe the ultrasound, CT findings, and clinical manifestations of pathologically confirmed skeletal muscle metastases involving trunk and pelvis.
OBJECTIVE
To describe the ultrasound, CT findings, and clinical manifestations of pathologically confirmed skeletal muscle metastases involving trunk and pelvis.
METHODS
71 patients with 71 skeletal muscle metastases of the trunk and pelvis, pathologically proven by ultrasound-guided biopsy, were included in the study, and ultrasound findings were reviewed. CT findings were reviewed for 60 patients who underwent post-contrast CT obtained prior to biopsy, which included skeletal muscle metastases. Medical records, including the type of primary malignancy, presence of coexisting distant metastasis, and method of detection that led to referral for biopsy, were reviewed.
RESULTS
Most skeletal muscle metastases were hypoechoic (98.6%) with well-defined margins (85.9%), round-to-oval (47.9%), or lobulated (42.2%) with intralesional vascularity (64.8%). Typical CT findings included abscess-like lesions with rim enhancement (53.3%) or round-to-oval lesions with homogeneous enhancement (40.0%). The most common primary malignancy was lung cancer (49.3%), followed by gastrointestinal cancer (7.0%). Distant metastases other than muscle metastases were found in 84.5% of patients, and coexisting skeletal muscle metastases were found in 47.9%. CT was the most common detection method for metastases (57.8%), being more common than positron emission tomography-CT (22.5%).
CONCLUSION
The current study describes the typical imaging findings of skeletal muscle metastases of the trunk and pelvis in patients with advanced cancer. CT may play an important role in the early detection of skeletal muscle metastases, and our results may aid radiologists in their diagnosis.
ADVANCES IN KNOWLEDGE
1. Skeletal muscle metastases of the trunk and pelvis demonstrate typical imaging findings on ultrasound and CT.2. CT may aid in the early detection of skeletal muscle metastases, which are among the rarest, and our results may aid radiologists in their diagnosis.
Topics: Humans; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Muscle Neoplasms; Positron-Emission Tomography; Muscle, Skeletal; Pelvis
PubMed: 36069399
DOI: 10.1259/bjr.20220513 -
Journal of the American Academy of... Jun 2023The term "spinopelvic mobility" is most often applied to motion within the spinopelvic segment. It has also been used to describe changes in pelvic tilt between various... (Review)
Review
INTRODUCTION
The term "spinopelvic mobility" is most often applied to motion within the spinopelvic segment. It has also been used to describe changes in pelvic tilt between various functional positions, which is influenced by motion at the hip, knee, ankle and spinopelvic segment. In the interest of establishing a consistent language for spinopelvic mobility, we sought to clarify and simplify its definition to create consensus, improve communication, and increase consistency with research into the hip-spine relationship.
METHODS
A literature search was performed using the Medline (PubMed) library to identify all existing articles pertaining to spinopelvic mobility. We reported on the varying definitions of spinopelvic mobility including how different radiographic imaging techniques are used to define mobility.
RESULTS
The search term "spinopelvic mobility" returned a total of 72 articles. The frequency and context for the varying definitions of mobility were reported. 41 papers used standing and upright relaxed-seated radiographs without the use of extreme positioning, and 17 papers discussed the use of extreme positioning to define spinopelvic mobility.
DISCUSSION
Our review suggests that the definitions of spinopelvic mobility is not consistent in the majority of published literature. We suggest descriptions of spinopelvic mobility independently consider spinal motion, hip motion, and pelvic position, while recognizing and describing their interdependence.
Topics: Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip; Consensus; Pelvis; Posture; Spine; Humans
PubMed: 37294841
DOI: 10.5435/JAAOSGlobal-D-22-00290 -
Gait & Posture Feb 2021During walking, variability in how movement is coordinated between body segments from stride to stride facilitates adaptation to changing environmental or task...
BACKGROUND
During walking, variability in how movement is coordinated between body segments from stride to stride facilitates adaptation to changing environmental or task constraints. Magnitude of this inter-segmental coordination variability is reduced in patient populations and may also decrease in response to muscle fatigue. Previously, stride-to-stride variability has been quantified with the Vector Coding (VC) method, however recent research introduced a new Ellipse Area Method (EAM) to avoid statistical artifacts associated with VC.
RESEARCH QUESTION
Determine changes in trunk-pelvis coordination variability during walking turns in response to fatiguing exercise and to compare coordination variability quantified with VC to the EAM method.
METHODS
15 young adults (mean age: 23.7 (±3.2) years) performed 15 trials of a 90-degree walking turn before and after fatiguing paraspinal muscle exercise. Angular kinematics of the trunk and pelvis segments in the axial plane were quantified using three-dimensional motion capture. Stride to stride variability of axial coordination between the trunk and pelvis pre- and post-fatigue was calculated using both VC and EAM methods. Magnitudes of pre- and post-fatigue variability for VC and EAM were compared with paired t-tests and relationship between the magnitude of variability for the two methods was calculated using Pearson correlation coefficients.
RESULTS
Using both analytical approaches, trunk-pelvis coordination variability decreased significantly post-fatiguing exercise across the stride cycle and within the stance phase of the turn (p < 0.034 for all comparisons). Average magnitudes of variability calculated with VC and EAM were highly correlated. Time series cross correlations pre-post fatigue ranged from 0.81 to 0.98.
SIGNIFICANCE
In healthy individuals, magnitude of trunk-pelvis stride-to-stride coordination variability is reduced following fatiguing exercise but the temporal distribution of variability across the stride cycle is maintained. This finding is robust to the method used to quantify coordination variability.
Topics: Adaptation, Physiological; Adult; Biomechanical Phenomena; Exercise; Fatigue; Female; Healthy Volunteers; Humans; Male; Pelvis; Torso; Young Adult
PubMed: 33260075
DOI: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2020.11.019