3 resultados para RGB and IR Registration

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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The paradoxically low infant mortality rates for Mexican Americans in Texas have been attributed to inaccuracies in vital registration and idiosyncracies in Mexican migration in rural areas along the U.S.-Mexico border. This study examined infant (IMR), neonatal (NMR), and postneonatal (PNMR) mortality rates of Mexican Americans in an urban, non-border setting, using linked birth and death records of the 1974-75 single live birth cohort (N = 68,584) in Harris County, Texas, which includes the city of Houston and is reported to have nearly complete birth and death registration. The use of parental nativity with the traditional Spanish surname criterion made it possible to distinguish infants of Mexican-born immigrants from those of Blacks, Anglos, other Hispanics, and later-generation, more Anglicized Mexican Americans. Mortality rates were analyzed by ethnicity, parental nativity, and cause of death, with respect to birth weight, birth order, maternal age, legitimacy status, and time of first prenatal care.^ While overall IMRs showed Spanish surname rates slightly higher than Anglo rates, infants of Mexican-born immigrants had much lower NMRs than did Anglos, even for moderately low birth weight infants. However, among infants under 1500 grams, presumably unable to be discharged home in the neonatal period, Mexican Americans had the highest NMR. The inconsistency suggested unreported deaths for Mexican American low birth weight infants after hospital discharge. The PNMR of infants of Mexican immigrants was also lower than for Anglos, and the usual mortality differentials were reversed: high-risk categories of high birth order, high maternal age, and late/no prenatal care had the lowest PNMRs. Since these groups' characteristics are congruent with those of low-income migrants, the data suggested the possibility of migration losses. Cause of death analysis suggested that prematurity and birth injuries are greater problems than heretofore recognized among Mexican Americans, and that home births and "shoebox burials" may be unrecorded even in an urban setting.^ Caution is advised in the interpretation of infant mortality rates for a Spanish surname population of Mexican origin, even in an urban, non-border area with reportedly excellent birth and death registration. ^

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Cryoablation for small renal tumors has demonstrated sufficient clinical efficacy over the past decade as a non-surgical nephron-sparing approach for treating renal masses for patients who are not surgical candidates. Minimally invasive percutaneous cryoablations have been performed with image guidance from CT, ultrasound, and MRI. During the MRI-guided cryoablation procedure, the interventional radiologist visually compares the iceball size on monitoring images with respect to the original tumor on separate planning images. The comparisons made during the monitoring step are time consuming, inefficient and sometimes lack the precision needed for decision making, requiring the radiologist to make further changes later in the procedure. This study sought to mitigate uncertainty in these visual comparisons by quantifying tissue response to cryoablation and providing visualization of the response during the procedure. Based on retrospective analysis of MR-guided cryoablation patient data, registration and segmentation algorithms were investigated and implemented for periprocedural visualization to deliver iceball position/size with respect to planning images registered within 3.3mm with at least 70% overlap and a quantitative logit model was developed to relate perfusion deficit in renal parenchyma visualized in verification images as a result of iceball size visualized in monitoring images. Through retrospective study of 20 patient cases, the relationship between likelihood of perfusion loss in renal parenchyma and distance within iceball was quantified and iteratively fit to a logit curve. Using the parameters from the logit fit, the margin for 95% perfusion loss likelihood was found to be 4.28 mm within the iceball. The observed margin corresponds well with the clinically accepted margin of 3-5mm within the iceball. In order to display the iceball position and perfusion loss likelihood to the radiologist, algorithms were implemented to create a fast segmentation and registration module which executed in under 2 minutes, within the clinically-relevant 3 minute monitoring period. Using 16 patient cases, the average Hausdorff distance was reduced from 10.1mm to 3.21 mm with average DSC increased from 46.6% to 82.6% before and after registration.

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Ras proteins (H-, N-, K4A-, and K4B) are associated with cellular resistance to ionizing radiation (IR) and, consequently, may provide a potential target for radiosensitization strategies in cancer treatment. Several approaches have been used to compromise Ras activity and enhance IR-induced cell killing; however, these techniques either target proteins in addition to Ras or only target one member of the Ras family. In this study, I have used an adenovirus (AV1Y28) that expresses a single-chain antibody fragment directed against Ras proteins to investigate the mechanism(s) responsible for Ras-mediated radiation resistance. AV1Y28 enhanced the radiosensitivity of a number of human tumor cell lines without affecting the radiosensitivity of normal human fibroblasts. Whereas AV1Y28-mediated sensitization was independent of ras gene mutational status, it was dependent on active Ras proteins suggesting that AV1Y28 may be useful against a broad range of tumors. AV1Y28-mediated cell killing was not the result of redistributing cells into a more radiosensitive phase of the cell cycle and did not enhance IR-induced apoptosis. Given that Ras proteins transduce environmental signals to the nucleus, the effect of AV1Y28 on the IR-inducible transcription factor NF-κB were determined. Although AV1Y28 inhibited IR-induced NF-κB through the suppression of IKK, additional work established that NF-κB did not play a role in AV1Y28-mediated radiosensitization. However, a novel component of the signaling pathway responsible for IR-induced NF-κB was identified. Previous studies had suggested a relationship between mutant ras genes and IR-induced G2 delay; therefore the effects of AV1Y28 on the progression of cells from G2 to M after IR were determined. Pretreatment of cells with AV1Y28 prevented the IR-induced G2 arrest. AV1Y28-mediated abrogation of IR-induced G2 arrest correlated with those cell line lines that were sensitized by AV1Y28. Moreover, a significant increase in cells undergoing mitotic catastrophe was found after IR in AV1Y28 treated cells. The abrogation of G2 arrest by AV1Y28 was the result of maintaining the active form of cdc2, an inducer of mitosis, after exposure to IR. This study identified the mechanism of AV1Y28-mediated radiosensitization and has provided insight into the signal transduction pathways responsible for Ras-mediated radiation resistance. ^