Our findings indicate that the likelihood of developing pneumonia is directly related to the degree of swallowing dysfunction seen on videofluoroscopic studies. Patients with no laryngeal penetration-regardless of whether they had normal or abnormal swallowing-have the lowest risk of developing pneumonia. Patients with laryngeal penetration, tracheobronchial aspiration, or silent tracheobronchial aspiration are, in increasing order of magnitude, significantly more likely to develop pneumonia than patients with normal swallowing.
The institutional review board approved the described HIPAA-compliant study, which was performed to prospectively evaluate observer performance in the detection of artificial multiple sclerosis (MS) lesions that were randomly distributed supra- and infratentorially on simulated fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR) magnetic resonance (MR) images obtained at different echo times (TEs). MR parametric maps were derived from mixed multi-echo inversion-recovery images obtained in a 40-year-old healthy male volunteer and in a patient with MS, both of whom gave informed consent. Pseudo-randomly distributed artificial MS lesions of varying size, number, and location were equally represented on the FLAIR images (11 000/100-200/2600 [repetition time msec/TE msec/inversion time msec]). Twelve images obtained in both regions at each of 11 TEs spaced 10 msec apart were rated by seven neuroradiologists by using a four-point scale. Observer performance in the detection of MS lesions on the FLAIR images, as estimated by using areas under the alternative free-response receiver operating characteristic curve, was highest and most consistent at the 100-msec TE, both supratentorially (93.0% +/- 8.6 [standard error of the mean]) and infratentorially (87.4% +/- 10.0).
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