In patients with DME or macular edema due to RVO, the number of HRDs on SD-OCT may be a predictive indicator of the response to IVB injection or dexamethasone implant. In bevacizumab responders, the number of HRDs on SD-OCT was small. In contrast, more HRDs, which might reflect increased inflammation in the retina, were observed in dexamethasone responders. Therefore, dexamethasone implants might be more effective in DME or RVO eyes with multiple HRDs and OPL disruption on SD-OCT.
A wavelet electrocardiogram (ECG) data codec based on the set partitioning in hierarchical trees (SPIHT) compression algorithm is proposed in this paper. The SPIHT algorithm [1] has achieved notable success in still image coding. We modified the algorithm for the one-dimensional case and applied it to compression of ECG data. Experiments on selected records from the MIT-BIH arrhythmia database revealed that the proposed codec is significantly more efficient in compression and in computation than previously proposed ECG compression schemes. The coder also attains exact bit rate control and generates a bit stream progressive in quality or rate.
Treatment of idiopathic CSC by both IVB and half-fluence photodynamic therapy can reduce SFChT when subretinal fluid is completely resolved. Recurrence is more frequent after IVB and specifically in eyes with a smaller reduction in SFChT after resolution of the CSC.
This study evaluated the feasibility of utilizing a 3D-printed anthropomorphic patient-specific head phantom for patient-specific quality assurance (QA) in intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT). Contoured left and right head phantoms were converted from DICOM to STL format. Fused deposition modeling (FDM) was used to construct an anthropomorphic patient-specific head phantom with a 3D printer. An established QA technique and the patient-specific head phantom were used to compare the calculated and measured doses. When the established technique was used to compare the calculated and measured doses, the gamma passing rate for γ ≤ 1 was 97.28%, while the gamma failure rate for γ > 1 was 2.72%. When the 3D-printed patient-specific head phantom was used, the gamma passing rate for γ ≤ 1 was 95.97%, and the gamma failure rate for γ > 1 was 4.03%. The 3D printed patient-specific head phantom was concluded to be highly feasible for patient-specific QA prior to complicated radiotherapy procedures such as IMRT.
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