The minimum emetic dose of deoxynivalenol to swine weighing 9 to 10 kg was 0.05 mg/kg of body weight intraperitoneally and 0.1 to 0.2 mg/kg orally. There was no emesis by undosed pigs consuming vomitus from pigs orally dosed with deoxynivalenol or penned with such pigs without access to vomitus. Analysis by gas-liquid chromatography of a sample of Gibberella zeae-infected corn containing about 25% visually damaged kernels indicated 12 ppm of deoxynivalenol. Deoxynivalenol added to feed reduced feed consumption of 20to 45-kg pigs, ranging from a 20% decrease with 3.6 ppm to 90% reduction with 40 ppm. Loss in weight was associated with feed refusal. Feed refusal, however, was much greater for naturally infected corn samples than for feeds with equal concentrations of the pure compound added, indicating the involvement of an additional factor(s) in the swine refusal response.
SUMMARYComputed tomography (CT) of the lung in normal subjects and patients with congestive heart failure was performed in the supine position with deep inspiration to obtain pulmonary CT values and images. The mean CT value in normal subjects was higher in the posterior than anterior lung field, presumably because blood vessels were more dilated in the former than the latter due to the effects of gravity. The mean pulmonary CT value in patients with congestive heart failure was significantly increased possibly due to an increase in blood flow per unit lung volume arising from either pulmonary congestion or pulmonary interstitial and alveolar edema.The mean pulmonary CT value increased parallel to the severity of pulmonary congestion, interstitial or alveolar edema and was well correlated with the pulmonary arterial wedge pressure, indicating that such a correlation was a valuable tool in assessing therapeutic effects.The results of the present study indicate that pulmonary CT is useful for the noninvasive estimation of intrapulmonary water content and its distribution, thereby providing an effective diagnostic clue to various conditions in congestive heart failure.Additional Indexing Words: Congestive heart failure Pulmonary CT value Pulmonary CT image Pulmonary edema OUTINE chest roentgenography plays an important role in the diagnosis of congestive heart failure, providing excellent qualitative but minimal quantitative evidence of pulmonary congestion. Computed tomography (CT) can be used to quantitatively estimate the water content of lung tissue based on the X-ray attenuation coefficient (CT value) per unit vol-
Cardiac computed tomography (CT) to detect coronary calcification was performed on 161 patients undergoing coronary angiography for proven or suspected coronary artery disease. Among 108 patients in whom coronary calcifications was identified, 90% had significant coronary stenosis angiographically (greater than 75% stenosis), and 80% of 121 patients with significant coronary stenosis showed calcification by CT. The relationship between the calcification site and the significance in stenosis of each vessel was determined. Calcification was present in 133 arteries among 205 stenotic coronary arteries (sensitivity = 65%) as compared with 59 of 439 entire arteries with normal coronary angiograms (specificity = 87%). In the younger age group the sensitivity of calcification for stenosis of each coronary artery was lower and the specificity and predictive value were generally higher than those in the elderly group. These results demonstrate that CT is a valuable procedure for detecting coronary arterial disease, since this examination is easy to conduct, noninvasive, and widely applicable for screening a large population.
Conventional and enhanced computed tomographic (CT) examinations were performed in 103 patients with myocardial infarction for evaluation of the diagnostic usefulness of CT. After intravenous bolus injection of contrast material, an initial filling defect and late enhancement of the infarcted myocardium appeared on the cardiac CT images. These two findings were direct evidence of myocardial infarction; the former was found mostly in the patient with recent myocardial infarctions, and the latter was recognized both in those with recent and those with "remote" infarctions. In spite of these excellent results from fundamental studies, the clinical application of CT in the diagnosis of myocardial infarction has not become popular thus far. We have been studying the clinical value of CT in the evaluation of patients with myocardial infarction. In previous articles we reported the abnormality of regional wall movement in the infarcted heart detected by electrocardiographically gated CT'7 and the increase in CT values in the congestive lung resulting from myocardial infarction.'8 The purpose of this report is to describe other CT diagnostic findings in patients with myocardial infarction.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the long-term prognosis of unoperated thoracic aortic aneurysms, and to detect the risk factors which determine the prognosis of unoperated patients. The subjects were 52 unoperated patients with 58 thoracic aortic aneurysms (22 of the ascending aorta, 36 of the descending aorta or the aortic arch) and 38 with abdominal aortic aneurysms. The survival rates of the patients with ascending aortic aneurysms at 3 years and 5 years and those of the patients with descending aortic aneurysms at 5 years were significantly higher than those of the patients with abdominal aortic aneurysms. The risk factors for rupture of thoracic aortic aneurysms were the large size of aneurysms and non-management by the cardiologist and the risk factors for death unrelated to the aneurysms were patient age, male gender and non-management by the cardiologist.
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