The established test for disease in the internal carotid artery using continuous wave Doppler is to listen for flow velocity changes over the supraorbital artery with ipsilateral temporal (or facial) artery compression. This is only reliable when there is a reduction in mean pressure (and flow) distal to disease in the internal carotid artery, ie reduction of lumen diameter by more than 85%. In this study, 101 vessel segments (48 with disease at the carotid junction, 53 normal) were compared with the results of angiography. Seven gave a positive temporal artery occlusion test, all of which showed severe disease. However, spectral analysis of the Doppler signals from supraorbital and common carotid arteries showed sonagram changes both with ageing and with disease. In particular, the ratio of primary peak (A) to secondary peak (B) in systole falls, the A/B ratio being lower in disease than in health. At A/B ratios less than 1.05 there was an 88% probability of disease at the carotid junction. 36/48 (75%) diseased junctions were detected, including almost all major lesions. The method did not so reliably detect small lesions (less than 2 mm plaques, less than 60% lumen diameter stenosis, and 'minimal atheroma'). In 5/53 normal junctions the A/B ratio was in the disease range. Scanning the carotid junction for turbulence yielded additional information in some cases.
A retrospective review was made of the pretreatment radiographs of 20 patients with well-documented primary lymphoma of bone. Nine radiographic signs were defined, and the presence or absence of each was recorded for each patient. When the radiographic findings were compared with disease-free survival for each patient, it was found that patients who had a relapse had a higher mean number of positive radiographic signs than those who remained disease free (p less than 0.02). Also, those who relapsed early had more positive signs than those who relapsed late (p less than 0.05). Certain signs, i.e., pathologic fracture, layered periosteal new bone, broken periosteal new bone, cortical breakthrough, soft-tissue mass, and soft-tissue swelling, were more helpful than others for making a prognosis. These signs appear to be related to radiologic evidence of imminent or actual soft-tissue extension of the tumor.
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