PURPOSE. To evaluate peripapillary vessel density and morphology in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) without clinical signs of diabetic retinopathy (DR) and with mild, nonproliferative DR and to correlate with peripapillary nerve fiber layer (NFL) thickness. METHODS. One hundred seventeen eyes (34 healthy controls, 54 patients with DM without DR [noDR group] and 24 patients with mild DR [DR group]) were prospectively evaluated. All subjects underwent peripapillary and macular optical coherence tomography angiography (OCT-A). Peripapillary NFL thickness was also recorded. OCT-A slab of radial peripapillary plexus (RPC) and macular superficial capillary plexus (SCP) were analysed in order to calculate perfusion density (PD) and vessel density (VD). Further an image analysis of RPC slab was performed to identify number of branches (NoB) and total branches length (tBL). RESULTS. In peripapillary area there was a significant decrease in VD (P ¼ 0.003), NoB (P < 0.001), and tBL (P < 0.001) in noDR group versus controls; PD values were not different among groups (P ¼ 0.126); there was a significant decrease in average NFL thickness in DR versus controls (P ¼ 0.008) and in the inferior quadrant in noDR group versus controls (P ¼ 0.03); there was a significant correlation between OCT-A and NFL thickness values (q ranging from 0.19-0.57). In macular region PD and VD were decreased only in DR group (P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS. There are early changes in the peripapillary vessel morphology and VD of the RPC in patients with DM without DR that correlate to NFL thinning. Earlier changes in superficial vessel density are documented in the peripapillary than in the macular region. These data may confirm a coexistence of an early neuronal and microvascular damage in patients with DM without clinical signs of DR.
BackgroundFDG-PET/CT imaging has an emerging role in staging and treatment planning of various tumor locations and a number of literature studies show that also the carcinoma of the anal canal may benefit from this diagnostic approach. We analyzed the potential impact of FDG-PET/CT in stage definition and target volume delineation of patients affected by carcinoma of the anal canal and candidates for curative radiotherapy.MethodsTwenty seven patients with biopsy proven anal carcinoma were enrolled. Pathology was squamous cell carcinoma in 20 cases, cloacogenic carcinoma in 3, adenocarcinoma in 2, and basal cell carcinoma in 2. Simulation was performed by PET/CT imaging with patient in treatment position. Gross Tumor Volume (GTV) and Clinical Target Volume (CTV) were drawn on CT and on PET/CT fused images. PET-GTV and PET-CTV were respectively compared to CT-GTV and CT-CTV by Wilcoxon rank test for paired data.ResultsPET/CT fused images led to change the stage in 5/27 cases (18.5%): 3 cases from N0 to N2 and 2 from M0 to M1 leading to change the treatment intent from curative to palliative in a case.Based on PET/CT imaging, GTV and CTV contours changed in 15/27 (55.6%) and in 10/27 cases (37.0%) respectively. PET-GTV and PET-CTV resulted significantly smaller than CT-GTV (p = 1.2 × 10-4) and CT-CTV (p = 2.9 × 10-4). PET/CT-GTV and PET/CT-CTV, that were used for clinical purposes, were significantly greater than CT-GTV (p = 6 × 10-5) and CT-CTV (p = 6 × 10-5).ConclusionsFDG-PET/CT has a potential relevant impact in staging and target volume delineation of the carcinoma of the anal canal. Clinical stage variation occurred in 18.5% of cases with change of treatment intent in 3.7%. The GTV and the CTV changed in shape and in size based on PET/CT imaging.
The major findings of the present work are the demonstration of additivity of subset and iteration in OSEM over noise, with the possibility of defining an EM equivalent iteration number, and the superiority of OSEM with respect to FBP in terms of spatial resolution.
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