For assessing breast lesions, US elastography with the proposed imaging classification, which was simple compared with that of the Breast Imaging Recording and Data System classification, had almost the same diagnostic performance as conventional US.
We measured lipoproteins, apolipoproteins, lipoprotein lipase (LPL), hepatic triglyceride lipase (HTGL), lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) and parameters of calcium metabolism to evaluate the roles of these enzymes and hypertriglyceridemia for impaired high-density lipoprotein (HDL) metabolism in chronic renal failure, and to examine the impact of altered calcium homeostasis on the lipoprotein-regulating enzymes. The subjects were 25 healthy volunteers and 66 uremic patients, 24 treated with hemodialysis (HD) and 42 with continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD). Lipoprotein analysis revealed: (1) reduction in HDL cholesterol especially in HDL2 subfraction; (2) increase in HDL triglyceride; and (3) decreased ratio of HDL2 cholesterol to HDL3 cholesterol in both HD and CAPD patients. Simple regression analysis showed: (1) a positive correlation between VLDL triglyceride and triglyceride/cholesterol ratio of HDL; (2) positive correlations of LPL level in post-heparin plasma to cholesterol concentrations in HDL2, HDL3 and total HDL, and to apolipoproteins A-I and A-II; and (3) inverse correlations of HTGL to HDL2 cholesterol and to the ratio of HDL2 cholesterol/HDL3 cholesterol. Multiple regression analysis of HDL cholesterol indicated positive association with LPL and inverse correlation with VLDL triglyceride. Four variables including LPL, HTGL, LCAT and VLDL triglyceride explained 51.5% of the variation of HDL cholesterol. HDL2 cholesterol was associated positively with LPL and negatively with VLDL triglyceride in the model. HDL3 cholesterol was associated positively with LPL, HTGL and LCAT and inversely with VLDL triglyceride. Stepwise multiple regression analysis indicated that independent predictors of HTGL were gender, parathyroid hormone levels by a mid-portion assay, ionized calcium and age, and that those of LCAT were ionized calcium and age.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Background: Elastography is a diagnostic imaging technique that evaluates the hardness of a lesion. It is expected to become a new diagnostic modality for prostate cancer. The aim of this study was to examine the usefulness of elastography in the diagnosis of prostate cancer. Methods: A total of 29 patients with untreated, histologically proven prostate cancer were examined using an elastographic imaging technique. The patient was scanned in the dorsosacral position and the prostate was manually compressed with a transrectal ultrasonic probe. The echo signals from inside the tissue were measured before and after the tissue compression and an elastogram was generated by spatially differentiation of the displacement distribution. Results: Elastography depicted the cancer lesion as a harder tissue than the surrounding normal prostatic tissue. Elastography successfully detected 93% (27 patients) of the untreated prostate cancer lesions. Detection of cancer lesions using elastography was significantly higher than by digital rectal examination (59%; 17 patients) and transrectal ultrasonography (55%; 16 patients). Conclusion: Elastography has great potential as a useful modality for diagnosis of prostate cancer. Differentiation between cancerous and normal tissues can be expected to become more accurate as a result of technical advances in the quantification of tissue hardness.
We previously proposed the combined autocorrelation (CA) method to estimate the strain distribution in tissue. This method is based on the conventional Doppler method but overcomes the problem of aliasing, which is a weakness of the Doppler method. The ability of the CA method has been demonstrated with phantom experiments and in vitro measurements. However, we have to maintain the tissue displacement in the axial direction because the CA method is based on 1-D processing, and this is difficult to perform with the conventional compression system. Therefore, in this paper, we propose an extended CA method that is robust against sideslip. We also demonstrate the ability of this method with computer simulations.
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