The determination of age at death is an important part of physical and forensic anthropology. Because of resistance to decomposition and the simplicity/accuracy ratio, the direct observation of the os pubis by Suchey-Brooks phase analysis is the preferred reference system for determination of age at death. We propose an age-prediction system using a pubic symphysis numerical database obtained from CT x-ray through quantification of age-linked parameters. Our system increases the accuracy of age estimation and at the same time preserves the integrity of the archeological material.
Complete staging is mandatory for the management and therapy of neuroendocrine tumours. Various radiotracers are available but the best imaging strategy has yet to be defined. In this study we retrospectively compared 123I-MIBG, 111In-[D-Phe1]-DTPA-octreotide and 18F-FDG (PET) imaging in 15 patients with metastatic neuroendocrine tumours (11 carcinoid tumours, 4 paragangliomas). Planar images were acquired 1, 4, 24 and 48 h following the injection of 111In-[D-Phe1]-DTPA-octreotide and 123I-MIBG. Whole-body PET scans were performed 45 min after injection of 18F-FDG. 111In-[D-Phe1]-DTPA-octreotide was positive in 11/15 patients and identified 44 lesions, 18F-FDG PET was positive in 11/15 patients and identified 107 lesions and 123I-MIBG was positive in 8/15 patients and identified 67 lesions. No single scintigraphic technique identified all metastatic sites. In one patient all studies were negative. 18F-FDG PET identified more abnormal sites than the other two modalities. Combination of all three imaging modalities with X-ray CT helps to provide a more comprehensive map of the disease.
The determination of age at death is an important part of physical and forensic anthropology. Because of resistance to decomposition and the simplicity/accuracy ratio, the direct observation of the os pubis by Suchey-Brooks phase analysis is the preferred reference system for determination of age at death. We propose an age-prediction system using a pubic symphysis numerical database obtained from CT x-ray through quantification of age-linked parameters. Our system increases the accuracy of age estimation and at the same time preserves the integrity of the archeological material.
We address the issue of using deformable models to reconstruct an unknown attenuation map of the torso from a set of transmission scans. We assume the three-dimensional (3-D) distribution of attenuation coefficients to be piecewise uniform. We represent the unknown distribution by a set of closed surfaces defining regions having the same attenuating properties. The methods of reconstruction published so far tend to directly deform the surfaces, the parameters being the surface elements. Rather than deforming the surfaces, we explore the possibility of deforming the space in which the geometrical primitives are contained. We focus on the use of free-form deformations (FFD's) to describe the continuous transformation of space used to match a set of transmission measurements. We illustrate this approach by reconstructing realistically simulated transmission scans of the torso with various noise levels and compare the results to standard reconstruction methods.
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