• Duelund Porterfield posted an update 4 days, 9 hours ago

    9-12.6 % (between-run accuracy). Consequently, the method allowed the physiological-clinical alignment of the study conditions to therapeutic doses and the short residence time of intraoral drugs (sampling times 1-60 min). Applicability was demonstrated by assessing the oromucosal permeability for different sublingual cyclobenzaprine hydrochloride formulations representing the excipient selection as a common aspect during galenic development. Thereby, expressive evaluation of the dosage forms was achieved resulting in an improved permeation by replacing croscarmellose into polyvinylpyrrolidone (cumulative amount of 42.6 vs. 112.6 μg/cm²). selleck compound Thus, the automated permeation process ensured lean, standardized and reproducible assessment of oromucosal permeability within quality-controlled academic and regulatory environments. Simultaneously, the improved ex-vivo predictivity through physiological-clinical adjustments facilitates the reduction of costly in-vivo studies.

    Education research has been undervalued in radiology, with few radiology journals having dedicated space for such research and barriers to production including dedicated time, resources, grant funding, and mentorship. As radiologists, we have an opportunity to study education in our unique learning environments and create more effective ways to teach that are grounded in established education theory, solid assessment methodologies, and a focus on merit as well as worth.

    The growth of education research in our field requires a two-pronged approach; We must cultivate leaders in education research from within our specialty, and continue to submit high quality work to radiology journals to increase exposure of the reviewers and readership to education methodologies.

    We have created the first radiology education research fellowship to this end. This manuscript details the fellowship creation process, the first education research fellow experience, and in-depth analysis of the inaugural year via a qualitative program review.

    We were successful in supporting an inaugural fellow in attaining the knowledge and skills to become a productive education researcher. Beyond this, the fellowship experience was a catalyst in developing her unique professional identity as an education master which will further raise the status of education research in pediatric radiology.

    We were successful in supporting an inaugural fellow in attaining the knowledge and skills to become a productive education researcher. Beyond this, the fellowship experience was a catalyst in developing her unique professional identity as an education master which will further raise the status of education research in pediatric radiology.

    Patients who experienced transient monocular vision loss (TMVL) commonly present to the emergency department for evaluation. Although multiple etiologies can cause TMVL, it is most important to identify patients with retinal ischemia and those with vasculitis (giant cell arteritis) as the cause of TMVL. Patients with transient retinal ischemia have the same risk of cardiovascular events and death as patients who experienced transient brain ischemia. Patients with giant cell arteritis are at imminent risk of visual loss.

    A 65-year-old man noticed three separate episodes of sudden onset of blurry vision in one eye. Ophthalmologic examination was normal but, as his symptoms were compatible with transient retinal ischemic attack, urgent investigations were initiated. He had normal inflammatory markers but computed tomography angiogram of the brain and neck demonstrated a large plaque in the ipsilateral internal carotid artery. Double anti-platelet therapy was started and stenting of the involved carotid arterl carotid artery. Double anti-platelet therapy was started and stenting of the involved carotid artery was performed. The patient was symptom-free at the last follow-up. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS? Patients with retinal ischemia as the etiology of TMVL are at high risk of cardiovascular events and death. Their risk of cerebrovascular accidents is highest within 48 h from the episode of TMVL, thus they should have an urgent ophthalmologic examination and, if it is unrevealing, inflammatory markers should be checked and an urgent stroke prevention protocol should be initiated. Appropriate management with medical or surgical interventions significantly reduces morbidity and mortality in these patients.The purpose of this study was to explore the value of pre-operative prediction of lymphovascular invasion (LVI) in primary breast cancer patients undergoing modified radical mastectomy and to develop a nomogram based on multiparametric ultrasound and clinicopathologic indicators. All patients with primary breast cancer confirmed by pre-operative biopsy underwent B-mode ultrasound and contrast-enhanced ultrasound examinations. Post-operative pathology was used as the gold standard to identify LVI. Lasso regression was used to select predictors most related to LVI. A nomogram was developed to calculate the diagnostic efficacy. We bootstrapped the data for 500 times to perform internal verification, drawing a calibration curve to verify prediction ability. A total of 244 primary breast cancer patients were included. LVI was observed in 77 patients. Ten predictors associated with LVI were selected by Lasso regression. The area under the curve, sensitivity, specificity and accuracy for the nomogram were 0.918, 92.2%, 76.7% and 81.6%, respectively. And the nomogram calibration curve showed good consistency between the predicted probability and the actual probability. The nomogram developed could be used to predict LVI in primary breast cancer patients undergoing modified radical mastectomy and to help in clinical decision-making.This study was aimed at investigating the clinical feasibility of quantitative ultrasound (QUS) imaging in the evaluation of suspected hepatic steatosis through assessment of the reliability of measurements and its correlation with the controlled attenuation parameter (CAP). This retrospective study included 117 patients who underwent liver B-mode ultrasound (US) with QUS imaging with a clinical US machine (RS85, Samsung Medison, Seoul, Korea) and CAP measurements between December 2019 and March 2020. For QUS examination, tissue attenuation imaging (TAI) and tissue scatter-distribution imaging (TSI) parameters were obtained. Intra- and inter-examiner reliability were assessed using intra-class correlation coefficients (ICCs), and QUS imaging parameters were correlated with CAP measurements using Spearman’s correlation analysis. TAI and TSI revealed excellent intra- and inter-examiner reliability with ICCs of 0.994 and 0.975 and 0.991 and 0.947, respectively. Both TAI and TSI were significantly positively correlated with CAP values.