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Sökning: WFRF:(Borga Magnus) > (2015-2017)

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1.
  • Abrahamsson, Annelie, et al. (författare)
  • Dense breast tissue in postmenopausal women is associated with a pro-inflammatory microenvironment in vivo
  • 2016
  • Ingår i: Oncoimmunology. - : TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC. - 2162-4011 .- 2162-402X. ; 5:10
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Inflammation is one of the hallmarks of carcinogenesis. High mammographic density has been associated with increased risk of breast cancer but the mechanisms behind are poorly understood. We evaluated whether breasts with different mammographic densities exhibited differences in the inflammatory microenvironment.Postmenopausal women attending the mammography-screening program were assessed having extreme dense, n = 20, or entirely fatty breasts (nondense), n = 19, on their regular mammograms. Thereafter, the women were invited for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), microdialysis for the collection of extracellular molecules in situ and a core tissue biopsy for research purposes. On the MRI, lean tissue fraction (LTF) was calculated for a continuous measurement of breast density. LTF confirmed the selection from the mammograms and gave a continuous measurement of breast density. Microdialysis revealed significantly increased extracellular in vivo levels of IL-6, IL-8, vascular endothelial growth factor, and CCL5 in dense breast tissue as compared with nondense breasts. Moreover, the ratio IL-1Ra/IL-1 was decreased in dense breasts. No differences were found in levels of IL-1, IL-1Ra, CCL2, leptin, adiponectin, or leptin:adiponectin ratio between the two breast tissue types. Significant positive correlations between LTF and the pro-inflammatory cytokines as well as between the cytokines were detected. Stainings of the core biopsies exhibited increased levels of immune cells in dense breast tissue.Our data show that dense breast tissue in postmenopausal women is associated with a pro-inflammatory microenvironment and, if confirmed in a larger cohort, suggests novel targets for prevention therapies for women with dense breast tissue.
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2.
  • Agebratt, Christian, et al. (författare)
  • A Randomized Study of the Effects of Additional Fruit and Nuts Consumption on Hepatic Fat Content, Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Basal Metabolic Rate
  • 2016
  • Ingår i: PLOS ONE. - : Public Library of Science (PLoS). - 1932-6203. ; 11:1, s. e0147149-
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • BackgroundFruit has since long been advocated as a healthy source of many nutrients, however, the high content of sugars in fruit might be a concern.ObjectivesTo study effects of an increased fruit intake compared with similar amount of extra calories from nuts in humans.MethodsThirty healthy non-obese participants were randomized to either supplement the diet with fruits or nuts, each at +7 kcal/kg bodyweight/day for two months. Major endpoints were change of hepatic fat content (HFC, by magnetic resonance imaging, MRI), basal metabolic rate (BMR, with indirect calorimetry) and cardiovascular risk markers.ResultsWeight gain was numerically similar in both groups although only statistically significant in the group randomized to nuts (fruit: from 22.15±1.61 kg/m2 to 22.30±1.7 kg/m2, p = 0.24 nuts: from 22.54±2.26 kg/m2 to 22.73±2.28 kg/m2, p = 0.045). On the other hand BMR increased in the nut group only (p = 0.028). Only the nut group reported a net increase of calories (from 2519±721 kcal/day to 2763±595 kcal/day, p = 0.035) according to 3-day food registrations. Despite an almost three-fold reported increased fructose-intake in the fruit group (from 9.1±6.0 gram/day to 25.6±9.6 gram/day, p<0.0001, nuts: from 12.4±5.7 gram/day to 6.5±5.3 gram/day, p = 0.007) there was no change of HFC. The numerical increase in fasting insulin was statistical significant only in the fruit group (from 7.73±3.1 pmol/l to 8.81±2.9 pmol/l, p = 0.018, nuts: from 7.29±2.9 pmol/l to 8.62±3.0 pmol/l, p = 0.14). Levels of vitamin C increased in both groups while α-tocopherol/cholesterol-ratio increased only in the fruit group.ConclusionsAlthough BMR increased in the nut-group only this was not linked with differences in weight gain between groups which potentially could be explained by the lack of reported net caloric increase in the fruit group. In healthy non-obese individuals an increased fruit intake seems safe from cardiovascular risk perspective, including measurement of HFC by MRI.
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3.
  • Andersson, Thord, et al. (författare)
  • Consistent intensity inhomogeneity correction in water-fat MRI
  • 2015
  • Ingår i: Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging. - : Wiley-Blackwell. - 1053-1807 .- 1522-2586. ; 42:2
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • PURPOSE: To quantitatively and qualitatively evaluate the water-signal performance of the consistent intensity inhomogeneity correction (CIIC) method to correct for intensity inhomogeneitiesMETHODS: Water-fat volumes were acquired using 1.5 Tesla (T) and 3.0T symmetrically sampled 2-point Dixon three-dimensional MRI. Two datasets: (i) 10 muscle tissue regions of interest (ROIs) from 10 subjects acquired with both 1.5T and 3.0T whole-body MRI. (ii) Seven liver tissue ROIs from 36 patients imaged using 1.5T MRI at six time points after Gd-EOB-DTPA injection. The performance of CIIC was evaluated quantitatively by analyzing its impact on the dispersion and bias of the water image ROI intensities, and qualitatively using side-by-side image comparisons.RESULTS: CIIC significantly ( P1.5T≤2.3×10-4,P3.0T≤1.0×10-6) decreased the nonphysiological intensity variance while preserving the average intensity levels. The side-by-side comparisons showed improved intensity consistency ( Pint⁡≤10-6) while not introducing artifacts ( Part=0.024) nor changed appearances ( Papp≤10-6).CONCLUSION: CIIC improves the spatiotemporal intensity consistency in regions of a homogenous tissue type.
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4.
  • Borga, Magnus, et al. (författare)
  • Semi-Supervised Learning of Anatomical Manifolds for Atlas-Based Segmentation of Medical Images
  • 2016
  • Ingår i: Proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR). - : IEEE Computer Society. - 9781509048472 - 9781509048489 ; , s. 3146-3149
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • This paper presents a novel method for atlas-based segmentation of medical images. The method uses semi- supervised learning of a graph describing a manifold of anatom- ical variations of whole-body images, where unlabelled data are used to find a path with small deformations from the labelled atlas to the target image. The method is evaluated on 36 whole-body magnetic resonance images with manually segmented livers as ground truth. Significant improvement (p < 0.001) was obtained compared to direct atlas-based registration. 
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5.
  • Borga, Magnus, et al. (författare)
  • Validation of a Fast Method for Quantification of Intra-abdominal and Subcutaneous Adipose Tissue for Large Scale Human Studies
  • 2015
  • Ingår i: NMR in Biomedicine. - : John Wiley & Sons. - 1099-1492 .- 0952-3480. ; 28:12, s. 1747-1753
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Central obesity is the hallmark of a number of non-inheritable disorders. The advent of imaging techniques such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has allowed for a fast and accurate assessment of body fat content and distribution. However, image analysis continues to be one of the major obstacles for the use of MRI in large scale studies. In this study we assess the validity of the recently proposed fat-muscle-quantitation-system (AMRATM Profiler) for the quantification of intra-abdominal adipose tissue (IAAT) and abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue (ASAT) from abdominal MR images.  Abdominal MR images were acquired from 23 volunteers with a broad range of BMIs and analysed using SliceOmatic, the current gold-standard, and the AMRATM Profiler based on a non-rigid image registration of a library of segmented atlases. The results show that there was a highly significant correlation between the fat volumes generated by both analysis methods, (Pearson correlation r = 0.97 p<0.001), with the AMRATM Profiler analysis being significantly faster (~3 mins) than the conventional SliceOmatic approach (~40 mins). There was also excellent agreement between the methods for the quantification of IAAT (AMRA 4.73 ± 1.99 vs SliceOmatic 4.73 ± 1.75 litres, p=0.97). For the AMRATM Profiler analysis, the intra-observer coefficient of variation was 1.6 % for IAAT and 1.1 % for ASAT, the inter-observer coefficient of variation was 1.4 % for IAAT and 1.2 % for ASAT, the intra-observer correlation was 0.998 for IAAT and 0.999 for ASAT, and the inter-observer correlation was 0.999 for both IAAT and ASAT. These results indicate that precise and accurate measures of body fat content and distribution can be obtained in a fast and reliable form by the AMRATM Profiler, opening up the possibility of large-scale human phenotypic studies.
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6.
  • Cros, Olivier, et al. (författare)
  • Determination of the mastoid surface area and volume based on micro-CT scanning of human temporal bone : Geometrical parameters dependence on scanning resolutions
  • 2016
  • Ingår i: Hearing Research. - : Elsevier BV. - 0378-5955 .- 1878-5891. ; 340, s. 127-134
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • The mastoid air cell system (MACS) with its large complex of interconnected air cells reflects an enhanced surface area (SA) relative to its volume (V), which may indicate that the MACS is adapted to gas exchange and has a potential role in middle ear pressure regulation. Thus, these geometric parameters of the MACS have been studied by high resolution clinical CT scanning. However, the resolution of these scans is limited to a voxel size of around 0.6 mm in all dimensions, and so, the geometrical parameters are also limited. Small air cells may appear below the resolution and cannot be detected. Such air cells may contribute to a much higher SA than the V, and thus, also the SA/V ratio. More accurate parameters are important for analysis of the function of the MACS including physiological modeling.Our aim was to determine the SA, V, and SA/V ratio in MACS in human temporal bones at highest resolution by using micro-CT-scanning. Further, the influence of the resolution on these parameters was investigated by downsampling the data. Eight normally aerated temporal bones were scanned at the highest possible resolution (30-60 μm). The SA was determined using a triangular mesh fitted onto the segmented MACS. The V was determined by summing all the voxels containing air. Downsampling of the original data was applied four times by a factor of 2.The mean SA was 194 cm2, the mean V was 9 cm3, and the mean SA/V amounted to 22 cm-1. Decreasing the resolution resulted in a non-linear decrement of SA and SA/V, whereas V was mainly independent of the resolution.The current study found significantly higher SA and SA/V compared with previous studies using clinical CT scanning at lower resolutions. These findings indicate a separate role of the MACS compared with the tympanum, and the results are important for a more accurate modeling of the middle ear physiology.
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7.
  • Cros, Olivier, 1975- (författare)
  • Image Analysis and Visualization of the Human Mastoid Air Cell System
  • 2015
  • Licentiatavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • From an engineering background, it is often believed that the human anatomy has already been fully described. Radiology has greatly contributed to understand the inside of the human body without surgical intervention. Despite great advances in clinical CT scanning, image quality is still related to a limited amount X-ray exposure for the patient safety. This limitation prevents fine anatomical structures to be visible and, more importantly, to be detected. Where such modality is of great advantage for screening patients, extracting parameters like surface area and volume implies the bone structure to be large enough in relation to the scan resolution.The mastoid, located in the temporal bone, houses an air cell system whose cells have a variation in size that can go far below current conventional clinical CT scanner resolution. Therefore, the mastoid air cell system is only partially represented on a CT scan. Any statistical analysis will be biased towards air cells of smaller size. To allow a complete representation of the mastoid air cell system, a micro-CT scanner is more adequate. Micro-CT scanning uses approximately the same amount of X-rays but for a much longer exposure time compared to what is normally allowed for patients. Human temporal bone specimens are therefore necessary when using such scanning method. Where the conventional clinical CT scanner lacks level of minutes details, micro-CT scanning provides an overwhelming amount of fine details.Prior to any image analysis of medical data, visualization of the data is often needed to learn how to extract the structures of interest for further processing. Visualization of micro-CT scans is of no exception. Due to the high resolution nature of the data, visualization of such data not only requires modern and powerful computers, but also necessitates a tremendous amount of time to adjust the hiding of irrelevant structures, to find the correct orientation, while emphasising the structure of interest. Once the quality of the data has been assessed, and a strategy for the image processing has been decided, the image processing can start, to in turn extract metrics such as the surface area or volume and draw statistics from it. The temporal bone being one of the most complex in the human body, visualization of micro-CT scanning of this bone awakens the curiosity of the experimenter, especially with the correct visualization settings.This thesis first presents a statistical analysis determining the surface area to volume ratio of the mastoid air cell system of human temporal bone, from micro-CT scanning using methods previously applied for conventional clinical CT scannings. The study compared current resul s with previous studies, with successive downsampling the data down to a resolution found in conventional clinical CT scanning. The results from the statistical analysis showed that all the small mastoid air cells, that cannot be detected in conventional clinical CT scans, do heavily contribute to the estimation of the surface area, and in consequence to the estimation of the surface area to volume ratio by a factor of about 2.6. Such a result further strengthens the idea of the mastoid to play an active role in pressure regulation and gas exchange.Discovery of micro-channels through specific use of a non-traditional transfer function was then reported, where a qualitative and a quantitative preanalysis was performed are described. To gain more knowledge about these micro-channels, a local structure tensor analysis was applied where structures are described in terms of planar, tubular, or isotropic structures. The results from this structural tensor analysis, also reported in this thesis, suggest these micro-channels to potentially be part of a more complex framework, which hypothetically would provide a separate blood supply for the mucosa lining the mastoid air cell system.
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8.
  • Dahlqvist Leinhard, Olof, 1978-, et al. (författare)
  • Body Composition Profiling using MRI - Normative Data for Subjects with Cardiovascular Disease Extracted from the UK Biobank Imaging Cohort
  • 2016
  • Konferensbidrag (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • PURPOSETo describe the distribution of MRI-derived body composition measurements in subjects with cardiovascular disease (CVD) compared to subjects without any history of CVD.METHOD AND MATERIALS1864 males and 2036 females with an age range from 45 to 78 years from the UK Biobank imaging study were included in the study. Visceral adipose tissue volume normalized with height2 (VATi), total abdominal adipose tissue volume normalized with height2 (ATATi), total lean thigh muscle volume normalized with body weight (muscle ratio) and liver proton density fat fraction (PDFF) were measured with a 2-point Dixon imaging protocol covering neck to knee and a 10-point Dixon single slice protocol positioned within the liver using a 1.5T MR-scanner (Siemens, Germany). The MR-images were analyzed using AMRA® Profiler research (AMRA, Sweden). 213 subjects with history of cardiovascular events (angina, heart attack, or stroke) (event group) were age and gender matched to subjects with high blood pressure (HBP group), and subjects without CVD (controls).Kruskal-Wallis and Mann-Whitney U tests were used to test the observed differences for each measurement and group without correction for multiple comparisons.RESULTSVATi in the event group was 1.73 (1.13 - 2.32) l/m2 (median, 25%-75% percentile) compared to 1.68 (1.19 - 2.23) in the HBP group, and 1.30 (0.82-1.87) in the controls. ATATi in the event group was 4.31 (2.90-5.39) l/m2 compared to 4.05 (3.07-5.12) in the HBP group, and 3.48 (2.48-4.61) in the controls. Muscle ratio in the event group was 0.13 (0.12 - 0.15) l/kg as well as in the HBP group, compared to 0.14 (0.12 - 0.15) in the controls. Liver PDFF in the event group was 2.88 (1.77 - 7.72) % compared to 3.44 (2.04-6.18) in the HBP group, and 2.50 (1.58 - 5.15) in the controls. Kruskal-Wallis test showed significant differences for all variables and group comparisons (p<0.007). The post hoc test showed significant differences comparing the controls to both the event group and the HBP group. These were more significant for VATi and ATATi (p<10-4) than for muscle ratio and PDFF (p<0.03). No significant differences were detected between the event group and the HBP group.CONCLUSIONCardiovascular disease is strongly associated with high VATi, liver fat, and ATATi, and with low muscle ratio.CLINICAL RELEVANCE/APPLICATIONThe metabolic syndrome component in CVD can be effectively described using MRI-based body composition profiling.
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9.
  • Dahlqvist Leinhard, Olof, 1978-, et al. (författare)
  • Body Composition Profiling using MRI - Normative Data for Subjects with Diabetes Extracted from the UK Biobank Imaging Cohort
  • 2016
  • Konferensbidrag (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • PURPOSETo describe the distribution of MRI derived body composition measurements in subjects with diabetes mellitus (DM) compared to subjects without diabetes.METHOD AND MATERIALS3900 subjects (1864 males and 2036 females) from the UK Biobank imaging study were included in the study. The age range was 45 to 78 years. Visceral adipose tissue volume normalized with height2 (VATi), total abdominal adipose tissue volume normalized with height2 (ATATi), total lean thigh muscle volume normalized with body weight (muscle ratio) and liver proton density fat fraction (PDFF) were measured with a 6 minutes 2-point Dixon imaging protocol covering neck to knee and a 10-point Dixon single axial slice protocol positioned within the liver using a 1.5T MR-scanner (Siemens, Germany). The MR-images were analyzed using AMRA® Profiler research (AMRA, Sweden). 194 subjects with clinically diagnosed DM (DM group) were age and gender matched to subjects without DM (control group). For each variable and group, the median, 25%-percentile and 75%-percentile was calculated. Mann-Whitney U test was used to test the observed differences.RESULTSVATi in the DM group was 2.13 (1.43-2.62) l/m2 (median, 25% - 75% percentile) compared to 1.32 (0.86 - 1.79) l/m2 in the control group. ATATi in the DM group was 4.94 (3.86-6.19) l/m2 compared to 3.40 (2.56 - 4.70) l/m2 in the control group. Muscle ratio in the DM group was 0.13 (0.11 - 0.14) l/kg compared to 0.14 (0.12 - 0.15) l/kg in the control group. Liver PDFF in the DM group was 7.23 (2.68 - 13.26) % compared to 2.49 (1.53 - 4.73) % in the control group. Mann-Whitney U test detected significant differences between the DM group and the control group for all variables (p<10-5).CONCLUSIONDM is strongly associated with high visceral fat, liver fat, and total abdominal fat, and low muscle ratio.CLINICAL RELEVANCE/APPLICATIONBody composition profiling shows high potential to provide direct biomarkers to improve characterization and early diagnosis of DM.
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10.
  • Gharehbaghi, Arash, et al. (författare)
  • A novel method for discrimination between innocent and pathological heart murmurs
  • 2015
  • Ingår i: Medical Engineering and Physics. - : Elsevier. - 1350-4533 .- 1873-4030. ; 37:7, s. 674-682
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • This paper presents a novel method for discrimination between innocent and pathological murmurs using the growing time support vector machine (GTSVM). The proposed method is tailored for characterizing innocent murmurs (IM) by putting more emphasis on the early parts of the signal as IMs are often heard in early systolic phase. Individuals with mild to severe aortic stenosis (AS) and IM are the two groups subjected to analysis, taking the normal individuals with no murmur (NM) as the control group. The AS is selected due to the similarity of its murmur to IM, particularly in mild cases. To investigate the effect of the growing time windows, the performance of the GTSVM is compared to that of a conventional support vector machine (SVM), using repeated random sub-sampling method. The mean value of the classification rate/sensitivity is found to be 88%/86% for the GTSVM and 84%/83% for the SVM. The statistical evaluations show that the GTSVM significantly improves performance of the classification as compared to the SVM.
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