1.Modified radical mastectomy preserving intercostobrachial nerve in clinical application
Minfu SU ; Changhui SUN ; Chengyin ZOU
Chinese Journal of Primary Medicine and Pharmacy 2011;18(23):3183-3184
Objective To explore the early(Ⅰ,Ⅱ)in modified radical mastectomy of breast cancer clinical value of preserving intercostobrachial nerve.Methods A retrospective analysis of 62 cases of early breast cancer patients with the clinical data,on intraoperative complete preservation of the intercostobrachial nerve in 46 cases as the observation group,intraoperative resected intercostobrachial nerve in 16 cases as control group,comparative analysis of the two groups after the upper medial arm and axilla skin paresthesia and breast cancer recurrence.Results All 62cases underwent modified radical mastectomy of breast cancer,all patients were cured.The observation group upper medial arm and axillary skin sensory abnormalities in 5 cases(10.9%),significantly lower than the control group of 16 cases(100%)(x2 =19.27,P <0.05).A mean follow-up of 1 year,the observation group in upper arm skin party abnormalities in patients with 5 cases,after 1 ~ 3 mongths recovery ;control group of sensory abnormalities were not returned to normal; the two groups were not found in local tumor recurrence or distant metastasis.Conclusion In modified radical mastectomy of breast cancer reserving intercostobrachial nerve was feasible,and could significantly reduce the postoperative lateral medial arm and axilla skin feeling abnormal rate,and improve the quality of life in patients.
2.Clinical study on the 18F-FDG PET/CT " one-stop" evaluation of the volume and activity of epicardial adipose tissue
Yuting CHANG ; Yao SU ; Jingjing YUAN ; Bixi CHEN ; Minfu YANG
Chinese Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 2022;42(4):216-220
Objective:To investigate the accuracy of free-breathing CT in evaluating the volume and shape of epicardial adipose tissue (EAT), and further explore the characteristics of EAT volume and activity in patients with atrial fibrillation using 18F-FDG PET/CT " one-stop" imaging. Methods:(1) Retrospective analysis was performed on 20 patients (16 males, 4 females, age: 33-86 (61.1±14.2) years) who underwent 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging and without obvious diseases affecting the images of the heart and surrounding lungs between March 2020 and May 2020 in Beijing Chaoyang Hospital. Free-breathing CT and breath-hold high resolution CT (HRCT) images were reviewed. Spearman rank correlation analysis, Bland-Altman consistency analysis and intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) were used to evaluate the correlation and consistency of the EAT volume and shape, as well as the repeatability of the two operators′ measurements. (2) Prospective analysis was conducted to compare the differences in EAT volume and 18F-FDG uptake values between 20 patients (6 males, 14 females, age: 52-76 (66.0±6.4) years) with atrial fibrillation and 10 healthy controls (3 males, 7 females, age: 59-69 (66.0±3.6) years) collected between August 2017 and August 2018 in Beijing Chaoyang Hospital. Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare the differences in EAT volume and 18F-FDG SUV max between patients with atrial fibrillation and healthy controls. EAT volume measurement was conducted by the combination of Mimics Research 21.0 software and manual analysis. The shape of EAT was automatically calculated by the same software to obtain the maximum length of the projection of the three-dimensional (3D) model on the reference axes ( x, y, z). SUV max of EAT was manually measured. Results:The measurements of EAT volume had good repeatability (intra-operator ICC=0.999; inter-operator ICC=0.997). There was a good correlation and a good consistency between EAT volumes measured by free-breathing CT and breath-hold HRCT (96.6 (79.9, 136.4) vs 96.2 (80.9, 135.8) ml; rs=0.929, P<0.001); data of 19 cases were within 95% limits of agreement (95% LoA). The maximum projection length of EAT 3D model on the reference coordinate axis also showed good correlation and consistency ( x axis: rs=0.869, P<0.001, data of 19 cases were within 95% LoA; y axis: rs=0.854, P<0.001, data of 18 cases were within 95% LoA; z axis: rs=0.586, P=0.007, data of 20 cases were within 95% LoA). EAT volume of atrial fibrillation group was higher than those of healthy control group (137.2 (113.9, 202.9) vs 94.4 (76.6, 134.4) ml; z=-2.11, P=0.035) and SUV max of EAT in the atrial fibrillation group was higher than that in healthy control group (1.2 (1.1, 1.5) vs 1.1 (1.0, 1.2); z=-2.14, P=0.035). Conclusions:Free-breathing CT and breath-hold HRCT have good correlation, consistency and repeatability in measurement of EAT volume and shape. 18F-FDG PET/CT can be a " one-stop" imaging strategy for the evaluation of EAT volume and activity.