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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Axelsson Jan 1966 ) ;srt2:(2015-2019)"

Sökning: WFRF:(Axelsson Jan 1966 ) > (2015-2019)

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21.
  • Pettersen, Trond R, et al. (författare)
  • European cardiovascular nurses' and allied professionals' knowledge and practical skills regarding cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: European journal of cardiovascular nursing : journal of the Working Group on Cardiovascular Nursing of the European Society of Cardiology. - : Oxford University Press (OUP). - 1873-1953 .- 1474-5151. ; 17:4, s. 336-344
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) remains a cornerstone in the treatment of cardiac arrest, and is directly linked to survival rates. Nurses are often first responders and need to be skilled in the performance of cardiopulmonary resuscitation. As cardiopulmonary resuscitation skills deteriorate rapidly, the purpose of this study was to investigate whether there was an association between participants' cardiopulmonary resuscitation training and their practical cardiopulmonary resuscitation test results.This comparative study was conducted at the 2014 EuroHeartCare meeting in Stavanger ( n=133) and the 2008 Spring Meeting on Cardiovascular Nursing in Malmö ( n=85). Participants performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation for three consecutive minutes CPR training manikins from Laerdal Medical®. Data were collected with a questionnaire on demographics and participants' level of cardiopulmonary resuscitation training.Most participants were female (78%) nurses (91%) from Nordic countries (77%), whose main role was in nursing practice (63%), and 71% had more than 11 years' experience ( n=218). Participants who conducted cardiopulmonary resuscitation training once a year or more ( n=154) performed better regarding ventilation volume than those who trained less (859 ml vs. 1111 ml, p=0.002). Those who had cardiopulmonary resuscitation training offered at their workplace ( n=161) also performed better regarding ventilation volume (889 ml vs. 1081 ml, p=0.003) and compression rate per minute (100 vs. 91, p=0.04) than those who had not.Our study indicates a positive association between participants' performance on the practical cardiopulmonary resuscitation test and the frequency of cardiopulmonary resuscitation training and whether cardiopulmonary resuscitation training was offered in the workplace. Large ventilation volumes were the most common error at both measuring points.
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22.
  • Rutegård, Miriam, et al. (författare)
  • PET/MRI and PET/CT hybrid imaging of rectal cancer - description and initial observations from the RECTOPET (REctal Cancer trial on PET/MRI/CT) study
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: Cancer Imaging. - : BMC. - 1740-5025 .- 1470-7330. ; 19
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • PurposeThe role of hybrid imaging using F-18-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose positron-emission tomography (FDG-PET), computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to improve preoperative evaluation of rectal cancer is largely unknown. To investigate this, the RECTOPET (REctal Cancer Trial on PET/MRI/CT) study has been launched with the aim to assess staging and restaging of primary rectal cancer. This report presents the study workflow and the initial experiences of the impact of PET/CT on staging and management of the first patients included in the RECTOPET study.MethodsThis prospective cohort study, initiated in September 2016, is actively recruiting patients from Region Vasterbotten in Sweden. This pilot study includes patients recruited and followed up until December 2017. All patients had a biopsy-verified rectal adenocarcinoma and underwent a minimum of one preoperative FDG-PET/CT and FDG-PET/MRI examination. These patients were referred to the colorectal cancer multidisciplinary team meeting at Umea University Hospital. All available data were evaluated when making management recommendations. The clinical course was noted and changes consequent to PET imaging were described; surgical specimens underwent dedicated MRI for anatomical matching between imaging and histopathology.ResultsTwenty-four patients have so far been included in the study. Four patients were deemed unresectable, while 19 patients underwent or were scheduled for surgery; one patient was enrolled in a watch-and-wait programme after restaging. Consequent to taking part in the study, two patients were upstaged to M1 disease: one patient was diagnosed with a solitary hepatic metastasis detected using PET/CT and underwent metastasectomy prior to rectal cancer surgery, while one patient with a small, but metabolically active, lung nodulus experienced no change of management. PET/MRI did not contribute to any recorded change in patient management.ConclusionsThe RECTOPET study investigating the role of PET/CT and PET/MRI for preoperative staging of primary rectal cancer patients will provide novel data that clarify the value of adding hybrid to conventional imaging, and the role of PET/CT versus PET/MRI.Trial registrationNCT03846882.
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23.
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24.
  • Sandgren, Kristina, et al. (författare)
  • Radiation dosimetry of [Ga-68]PSMA-11 in low-risk prostate cancer patients
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: EJNMMI Physics. - : Springer. - 2197-7364. ; 6
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Background: 68Ga-labeled Glu-NH-CO-NH-Lys(Ahx)-HBED-CC ([68Ga]PSMA-11) has been increasingly used to image prostate cancer using positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) both during diagnosis and treatment planning. It has been shown to be of clinical value for patients both in the primary and secondary stages of prostate cancer. The aim of this study was to determine the effective dose and organ doses from injection of [68Ga]PSMA-11 in a cohort of low-risk prostate cancer patients.Methods: Six low-risk prostate cancer patients were injected with 133–178 MBq [68Ga]PSMA-11 and examined with four PET/CT acquisitions from injection to 255 min post-injection. Urine was collected up to 4 h post-injection, and venous blood samples were drawn at 45 min, 85 min, 175 min, and 245 min post-injection. Kidneys, liver, lungs, spleen, salivary and lacrimal glands, and total body where delineated, and cumulated activities and absorbed organ doses calculated. The software IDAC-Dose 2.1 was used to calculate absorbed organ doses according to the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) publication 107 using specific absorbed fractions published in ICRP 133 and effective dose according to ICRP Publication 103. We also estimated the absorbed dose to the eye lenses using Monte Carlo methods.Results: [68Ga]PSMA-11 was rapidly cleared from the blood and accumulated preferentially in the kidneys and the liver. The substance has a biological half-life in blood of 6.5 min (91%) and 4.4 h (9%). The effective dose was calculated to 0.022 mSv/MBq. The kidneys received approximately 40 mGy after an injection with 160 MBq [68Ga]PSMA-11 while the lacrimal glands obtained an absorbed dose of 0.12 mGy per administered MBq. Regarding the eye lenses, the absorbed dose was low (0.0051 mGy/MBq).Conclusion: The effective dose for [68Ga]PSMA-11 is 0.022 mSv/MBq, where the kidneys and lacrimal glands receiving the highest organ dose.
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25.
  • Strandberg, Sara, et al. (författare)
  • Optimization of PET reconstruction algorithm, SUV thresholding algorithm and PET acquisition time in clinical 11C-acetate PET/CT
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: PLOS ONE. - : Public Library Science (PLOS). - 1932-6203. ; 13:12
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Introduction 11C-acetate (ACE)-PET/CT is used for staging of high-risk prostate cancer. PET data is reconstructed with iterative algorithms, such as VUEPointHD ViP (VPHD) and VUEPoint HD Sharp IR (SharpIR), the latter with additional resolution recovery. It is expected that the resolution recovery algorithm should render more accurate maximum and mean standardized uptake values (SUVmax and SUVmean) and functional tumor volumes (FTV) than the ordinary OSEM. Performing quantitative analysis, choice of volume-of-interest delineation algorithm (SUV threshold) may influence FTV. Optimizing PET acquisition time is justified if image quality and quantitation do not deteriorate. The aim of this study is to identify the optimal reconstruction algorithm, SUV threshold and acquisition time for ACE-PET/CT. Methods ACE-PET/CT data acquired with a General Electric Discovery 690 PET/CT from 16 consecutive high-risk prostate cancer patients was reconstructed with VPHD and SharpIR. Forty pelvic lymph nodes (LNs) and 14 prostate glands were delineated with 42% and estimated threshold. SUVmax, SUVmean, FTV and total lesion uptake were measured. Default acquisition time was four minutes per bed position. In a subset of lesions, acquisition times of one, two and four minutes were evaluated. Structural tumor volumes (STV) of the LNs were measured with CT for correlation with functional volumetric parameters. To validate SUV quantification under different conditions with SharpIR 42%, recovery coefficients (RCs) of SUVmean and FTV were calculated from a phantom with 18F-fluoro-deoxy-glucose (FDG)-filled volumes 0.1–9.2cm3 and signal-to-background (S/B) ratios 4.3–15.9. Results With SharpIR, SUVmax and SUVmean were higher and FTV lower compared with VPHD, regardless of threshold method, in both prostates and LNs. Total lesion uptake determined with both threshold methods was lower with SharpIR compared with VPHD with both threshold methods, except in subgroup analysis of prostate targets where estimated threshold returned higher values. Longer acquisition times returned higher FTV for both threshold methods, regardless of reconstruction algorithm. The FTV difference was most pronounced with one minute’s acquisition per bed position, which also produced visually the highest noise. SUV parameters were unaffected by varying acquisition times. FTV with SharpIR 42% showed the best correspondence with STV. SharpIR 42% gave higher RCs of SUVmean and FTV with increasing phantom size and S/B-ratio, as expected. Conclusions Delineation with SharpIR 42% seems to provide the most accurate combined information from SUVmax, SUVmean, FTV and total lesion uptake. Acquisition time may be shortened to two minutes per bed position with preserved image quality.
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26.
  • Wallstén, Elin, et al. (författare)
  • PET/MRI attenuation correction in the pelvic region with a statistical decomposition method
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging. - : Springer. - 1619-7070 .- 1619-7089. ; 46:SUPPL 1, s. S289-S290
  • Tidskriftsartikel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Aim/Introduction: Quantification in PET/MRI is of importance, and its accuracy is currently limited by the MR based attenuation correction estimate. A common method for attenuation correction of the pelvic region is based on a 2-echo Dixon MRI sequence for segmentation of fat and water and does not account for bone. In this work, we evaluate a new method for attenuation correction using an algorithm based on statistical decomposition of a T2 weighted MRI scan.Materials and Methods: Substitute CT images (sCTs) were calculated from T2 weighted MRI scans with a statistical decomposition algorithm, originally developed for MRI-based radiotherapy dose-planning [1]. These sCTs benefits from having bone density information included, in addition to fat and water information. Prostate cancer patients from the PARAPLY study [2] were retrospectivelyselected, scanned with PET/MRI 11C-Acatate and CT the same day. The stand-alone CT images were transformed to the same geometry as the PET and MR images, using a non-rigid registration. CT images, generated sCT images, and the Dixonbased attenuation maps (MRAC), all in the same geometry, were together with the PET raw data used to reconstruct attenuation-corrected PET images using the PETrecon toolbox [GE Healthcare]. The two MR-based attenuation corrections were compared to the CT-based attenuation correction with root mean squared error (RMSE). Lesion analysis will also be reported. PET/MRI images were acquired on a Signa PET/MRI (GE Healthcare), and the CT images on a Brilliance Big Bore (Phillips Healthcare). The study will include 12 patients and a subset of 6 patients has been analyzed so far and is presented here.Results: Soft tissue in-between pelvic bone structures were overestimated with 13% in MRAC-PET, and the error was reduced to 5% with sCT attenuation corrected PET (sCT-PET). For the whole patient volume, an average underestimation of 6% was found in the MRAC-PET, compared to 1% for sCTPET. RMSE within the body was reduced with a factor 2.5 with sCT-PET (RMSE=3.6%), compared to MRAC-PET (RMSE=8.8%).Conclusion: Applying sCT from statistical decomposition as a base for calculation of attenuation maps reduces quantification errors in PET-images of the pelvic region compared to the common Dixon based method.
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