US guidance of needle insertion into SI joints was feasible at both levels when defined sonoanatomic landmarks were used. If SI joint alterations do not allow for direct visualization of the dorsal joint space of the lower level, which is easier to access, the upper level might offer an appropriate alternative.
Objective. To determine whether a recently available contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) technique using secondgeneration microbubbles allows for the detection of active sacroiliitis, and to measure CEUS enhancement depth at the dorsocaudal part of the sacroiliac (SI) joints in healthy volunteers compared with patients with sacroiliitis. Methods. Forty-two consecutive patients (84 SI joints) presenting with a clinical diagnosis of sacroiliitis in 50 SI joints and 21 controls (42 SI joints) were investigated by CEUS using a standardized low mechanical index ultrasound protocol. Detected vascularity was used to retrospectively measure the enhancement depth in the dorsocaudal part of the SI joints. Results. CEUS detected enhancement in all clinically active SI joints, showing an enhancement depth into the dorsal SI joint cleft of 18.5 mm (range 16 -22.1), which was significantly higher compared with both inactive joints of patients (3.6 mm, range 0 -12; P < 0.001) and healthy controls (3.1 mm, range 0 -7.8; P < 0.001). All inactive joints were correctly classified based on a lack of deep enhancement in patients with sacroiliitis and controls (42 of 42, 100% sensitivity, 100% specificity; Cohen's ؍ 1). Conclusion. CEUS allowed the differentiation of active sacroiliitis from inactive SI joints, and proved to be a feasible method for the detection of vascularity in clinically active sacroiliitis by showing deep contrast enhancement into the SI joints not detectable in inactive joints of patients or controls. If this technique might add information to the earlier detection of sacroiliitis, it should be addressed in further studies.
Telemedicine and new media (e.g. the Internet, tele-teaching and tele-learning) are increasingly being used in medicine. We surveyed the awareness and acceptance of these developments on the part of medical students (n =750) at the University of Innsbruck. A 16-item questionnaire was handed out in randomly chosen medical classes and collected immediately after completion, which resulted in a response rate of 99.9%. Nearly all of the students used the Internet regularly (68%) or at least sometimes (30%). Telemedicine was already known to most of the students, mainly from articles in magazines and newspapers (41%), but the great majority of them (95%) reported that they did not know about the telemedicine lectures offered by the University of Innsbruck. Most students (75%) thought that they would benefit from tele-teaching or tele-learning. The survey suggested that medical schools should offer more special lectures, as well as undergraduate or postgraduate qualifications in telemedicine. The marketing of such opportunities needs to be improved.
Primary brachial plexus tumors are rare, usually benign, and in general have a good prognosis after surgical excision. We present a case of a schwannoma in which sonography enabled the correct diagnosis of a probably benign brachial plexus tumor. Key to the diagnosis was the demonstration of a smooth-bordered, longish, and well-defined nodule along a brachial plexus nerve root. Cross-sectional imaging modalities that provide a high degree of soft tissue contrast and spatial resolution, such as sonography and MR imaging, were suitable methods to establish the correct preoperative diagnosis. Findings at CT, sonography, MR imaging, and surgery are discussed.
The accuracy of telepathology diagnosis and conventional diagnosis of frozen sections was compared, using the diagnosis established on paraffin-embedded tissue as a reference. Out of a total of 270 cases, remote frozen-section diagnosis was correct in 227 cases (84.1%) and incorrect in 23 cases (8.5%). The latter comprised 12 false positive diagnoses of malignancy (4.4%) and 11 false negative diagnoses (4.1%). A diagnosis was not possible in 20 cases (7.4%). In contrast, the conventional frozen-section diagnosis was correct in 269 cases (99.6%) and incorrect in 1 case (0.4%), the latter being a false negative diagnosis. The average time needed to make a remote diagnosis was 14.2 min (SD 9). Manual examination was not found to be essential for remote frozen-section diagnosis. Overall slide quality was rated as 'satisfactory' to 'fair' by the six pathologists concerned. An improvement in the quality of slides is necessary to guarantee an acceptable level of accuracy of remote frozen-section diagnosis; a shortening of the time needed for diagnosis is a further requirement for the successful implementation of a routine telepathology frozen-section service.
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