1.Measurement of the Mucosal Surface Distance in the Early Gastric Cancer Using CT Gastrography.
Hyanghee CHOI ; Ho Young CHUNG ; Wansik YU ; Hun Kyu RYEOM ; Jae Hyuk LEE ; Jae CHOI ; Hee Su KIM ; Kevin CLEARY ; Seong Ki MUN
Journal of the Korean Gastric Cancer Association 2006;6(3):161-166
PURPOSE: Recently, the incidence of early gastric cancer (EGC) patients is rapidly increased in Korea. However, they're often not perceptible by surgical palpation or inspection. The aim of this study is 1) to develope a software that can locate the tumor and measure the mucosal distance from an anatomic landmark to the tumor using CT gastrography and 2) to compare the distance measured by the developed software with the distance measured by the pathologic findings. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between January 2004 and September 2005, sixty patients (male=45, female=15, mean 57.8 years old) estimated for EGC with preoperative CT scans and undergone gastrectomies in Kyungpook National University Hospital were enrolled in this study. Preoperative CT scans were performed after insufflations of room air via 5 Fr NG tube. The scans included the following parameters: (slice thickness/reconstruction interval: 0.625 mm, kVp: 120, mAs: 200). 3D volume rendering and measurement of the surface distance from the pylorus to the EGC were performed using the developed software. RESULTS: The average difference between the lesion to pylorus distances measured from pathologic specimens and CT gastrography was 5.3+/-2.9 mm (range 0~23 mm). The lesion to pylorus distance measured from CT gastrography was well correlated with that measured from the pathologic specimens (r=0.9843, P<0.001). CONCLUSION: These results suggest that the surface distance from an anatomic landmark to the EGC can be measured accurately by CT gastrography. This technique could be used for preoperative localization of early gastric carcinomas to determine the optimal extent of surgical resection.
Anatomic Landmarks
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Gastrectomy
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Gyeongsangbuk-do
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Humans
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Incidence
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Insufflation
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Korea
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Palpation
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Pylorus
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Stomach Neoplasms*
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed
2.Striatocapsular Infarct and Aphasia.
Soo Joo LEE ; Kwang Ho LEE ; Hyanghee KIM ; Mi Seon KWON ; Duk L NA ; Chin Sang CHUNG ; Joon Young CHOI ; Sang Eun KIM
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2001;19(1):10-18
BACKGROUND: Determining the mechanism for aphasia following a subcortical infarct involving the striatum and internal capsule has been controversial. The aim of this study was to determine the underlying mechanism, which might clarify the relationship between the severity of aphasia and the cortical hypoperfusion in a striatocapsular infarct. METHODS: We included 33 patients with striatocapsular infarcts in the dominant hemisphere on precontrast CT/MRI. A MR angiography (MRA) was done in all patients. Contrast enhanced MRI and/or triphasic perfusion CT (TPCT) were performed in 26 patients to identify slow collateral blood flows. The regional cerebral blood flow was evaluated in 14 out of 33 patients by perfusion SPECT. The index of aphasia severity was the aphasia quotient, measured by the Korean version-Western Aphasia Battery. RESULTS: Twenty-five of 33 patients (75.7%) showed aphasia with different degrees of severity. The four aphasic subgroups were mild (n=9), mild-to-moderate (n=8), moderate-to-severe (n=3), and severe (n=3) groups. Six patients with moderate-to-severe or severe degree of aphasia showed larger infarcts, occlusions of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) stem or internal carotid artery (ICA) on MRA, and abnormal delayed cortical vascular enhancements on MRI and/or TPCT. The severity of aphasia correlated strongly with the degree of perisylvian cortical hypoperfusion on SPECT. Focal perisylvian cortical atrophy on follow-up MRI was found in two patients with greater than moderate-to-severe aphasia. CONCLUSIONS: Aphasia of greater than moderate-to-severe degree following a striato-capsular infarct may be explained by selective neuronal loss of the perisylvian cortex due to the occlusion of the MCA stem or ICA and insufficient collateral blood flow. (J Korean Neurol Assoc 19(1):10~18, 2001
Angiography
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Aphasia*
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Atrophy
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Carotid Artery, Internal
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Follow-Up Studies
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Humans
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Internal Capsule
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Middle Cerebral Artery
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Neurons
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Perfusion
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Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon