Enlargement of the ascending aorta and aortic arch and increased aortic tortuosity reflect an aortopathy which enhances the probability of AAD. A model based on 3 anatomical variables demonstrates significant associations with AAD: it may allow identification by aortic imaging of the hypertensive patient most at risk, and permit implementation of aggressive medical management and consideration of pre-emptive surgery to prevent dissection.
Hepatoportal sclerosis is characterized by caudate lobe hypertrophy and right hepatic lobe atrophy, preserved liver volume, and lack of the liver nodularity associated with portal hypertension. In advanced cases, liver nodularity and atrophy produce an imaging appearance indistinguishable from that of cirrhosis.
Computed tomography volume measurements provide an objective method for ascertaining aortic size and monitoring expansion. Patients with small-to-moderate ascending aortic aneurysms who are carefully followed and managed appropriately have slow aneurysm growth and a small risk of rupture or dissection. Annual computed tomography screening may not be indicated, and elective resection-absent other surgical indications-is not necessary. The rupture/dissection risk for even larger aneurysms in carefully followed patients may be lower than currently believed.
Objectives: To evaluate volume changes within the tongue post chemoradiation therapy (CRT) Study Design: Retrospective review Setting: Academic Medical Center Subjects and Methods: Subjects included 19 patients that received CRT as the primary treatment for tonsillar or hypopharynx squamous cell carcinoma. Tongue volumes were calculated by three raters from thin slice computed tomography images collected before treatment and up to 29 months post-CRT. Body mass index (BMI) was also collected at each time point. Results: Inter-rater reliability was high with an ICC of 0.849 (95% CI = 0.773, 0.905). Linear mixed effects modeling showed a mean decrease of 0.45 cm3 (standard error of the mean [SEM] = 0.11) in tongue volume per month post-CRT ( P < .001). However, the addition of BMI to the model was significant (χ2 (4) = 25.0, P < .001), indicating that BMI was a strong predictor of tongue volume, with a mean decrease of 1.75 cm3 (SEM = 0.49) in tongue volume per unit decrease in BMI ( P < .001) and reducing the post-CRT effect on tongue volume decrease per month to 0.23 cm3 ( P = .02). BMI significantly ( P < .001) decreased by 0.11 units (SEM = 0.02) per month post radiation. Conclusion: Tongue dysfunction and decreased tongue strength are significant contributors to the dysphagia that patients experience after receiving CRT. In this study, both tongue volume and BMI decreased post-CRT; therefore, BMI could potentially be used as a predictor of tongue volume post-CRT.
Background
Relationship between live donor renal anatomic asymmetry and post-transplant recipient function has not been studied extensively.
Methods
We analyzed 96 live-kidney donors, who had anatomical asymmetry (>10% renal length and/or volume difference calculated from CT angiograms) and their matching recipients. Split function differences (SFD) were quantified with 99mTc-DMSA renography. Implantation biopsies at time-zero were semi-quantitatively scored. A comprehensive model utilizing donor renal volume adjusted to recipient weight (Vol/Wgt), SFD, and biopsy score was used to predict recipient estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) at one-year. Primary analysis consisted of a logistic regression model of outcome (odds of developing eGFR>60ml/min/1.73 m2 at one-year), a linear regression model of outcome (predicting recipient eGFR at one-year, using the CKD-EPI formula), and a Monte Carlo simulation based on the linear regression model (N=10,000 iterations).
Results
In the study cohort, the mean Vol/Wgt and eGFR at one-year were 2.04 ml/kg and 60.4 ml/min/1.73m2, respectively. Volume and split ratios between two donor kidneys were strongly correlated (r=0.79, p-value<0.001). The biopsy scores among SFD categories (<5%, 5–10%, >10%) were not different (p=0.190). On multivariate models, only Vol/Wgt was significantly associated with higher odds of having eGFR>60ml/min/1.73 m2 (OR=8.94, 95% CI 2.47–32.25, p=0.001) and had a strong discriminatory power in predicting the risk of eGFR<60ml/min/1.73m2 at one-year (ROC curve=0.78, 95% CI 0.68–0.89).
Conclusion
In the presence of donor renal anatomic asymmetry, Vol/Wgt appears to be a major determinant of recipient renal function at one-year post-transplantation. Renography can be replaced with CT volume calculation in estimating split renal function.
Regeneration of S4 is impaired in MHV+ donors. Caution should be taken when considering MHV removal on donors with dominant S4, especially on those with potential increased demand for liver regeneration, such as males, higher BMI and a smaller RLV.
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