Our aims were to use posturography to see if sway pattern differed between patients with large-fiber peripheral neuropathy and normal control subjects and, if it did, to compare posturography with conventional electromyography (EMG) as screening tools for large-fiber peripheral neuropathy. Thirteen patients who came to our neurophysiology laboratory with a preliminary diagnosis of peripheral neuropathy (made by their referring physicians) were compared with 7 nonmatched control subjects. All subjects received a neurologic examination and underwent posturography and conventional EMG. Results of posturography and conventional EMG were compared. Posturography showed abnormal sway patterns only in patients who had EMG abnormalities consistent with large-fiber peripheral neuropathy. These sway patterns differed significantly from those of the control subjects. Posturography seems to be a useful and well-tolerated screening test for patients with a history suggestive of peripheral neuropathy, and results of posturography agree with those of conventional EMG. Moreover, posturography directly measures increased sway in these patients and may be used as a more direct screen for risk of falls in this population.
Polyethylene wear in the acetabular components of hip prostheses is implicated in loosening and failure. Radiographic measurement of wear is used to identify patients at risk and to assess prosthesis designs. This paper focuses on analysis of prostheses with cemented acetabular cups from anteroposterior radiographs. The articular surface of the femoral head and the acetabular rim marker are modelled as spherical and circular respectively, resulting in elliptical image projections. Methods for automatically localising these structures in radiographs are presented using robust ellipse fitting and various error functions. Special attention is paid to the acetabular marker since this often projects as a highly eccentric ellipse. Robust fitting enables successful localisation in the presence of clutter without the need for user interaction. Finally, the use of these ellipses as reference structures for wear estimation is investigated and the effect of eccentricity errors is highlighted.
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