Objective. A prospective study was performed to assess the usefulness of contrast-enhanced color Doppler ultrasound (CDUS) in the evaluation of intraarticular vascularization of finger joints in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA).Methods. We investigated 198 finger joints in 46 patients with RA, and 80 finger joints in 10 healthy volunteers. Joints with varying levels of clinical activity of inflammation were classified as being active, moderately active, or inactive. CDUS was performed with a high-frequency multi-D linear array transducer. A microbubble-based ultrasound (US) contrast agent (Levovist; Schering, Berlin, Germany) was intravenously infused. Doppler findings were rated on the basis of both unenhanced and contrast-enhanced CDUS images.Results. Healthy joints showed no intraarticular vascularization on either unenhanced or contrastenhanced CDUS. Unenhanced CDUS detected intraarticular vascularization in 7 (8%) of 83 inactive joints, in 31 (52%) of 60 moderately active joints, and in 32 (58%) of 55 active joints. Contrast-enhanced CDUS detected intraarticular vascularization in 41 (49%) of 83 joints with inactive RA, in 59 (98%) of 60 joints with moderately active RA, and in all 55 joints with active RA. Detection of intraarticular vascularization was improved by administration of the microbubble-based US contrast agent (P < 0.001). Contrast-enhanced CDUS demonstrated differences in intraarticular vascularization between joints with inactive RA and those with active RA (P < 0.001), between joints with inactive RA and those with moderately active RA (P < 0.001), and between joints with moderately active RA and those with active RA (P < 0.001).
Conclusion. The use of a microbubble-based US contrast agent significantly improved the detection of intraarticular vascularization in the finger joints of patients with RA. This technique seems to be a useful adjunct in the assessment of disease activity.A crucial event in the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is the development of pannus (1). Proliferation of pannus is an early event in the course of the disease and can be seen before destruction of cartilage and bone. Vascularization of pannus appears to be crucial to its invasive and destructive behavior (2,3). Radiography is currently the method used for assessing the degree of actual joint destruction (4). Contrastenhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has also been utilized for this purpose, but this technique is not yet routinely available and is relatively cost-intensive and time-consuming (5,6).Hypervascularization of the pannus is usually caused by inflammatory activity. Color Doppler ultrasound (CDUS) imaging allows for detection of vascularity (6-11). CDUS combines the imaging capabilities of conventional B-mode ultrasound (US) with the bloodflow determinations of Doppler US and permits assessment of both the anatomy and the characteristics of blood flow of the vessels at specific sites. However, this technique is limited in the detection of slow flow and flow in small vessels. The add...
OBJECTIVES
To investigate, using transrectal colour Doppler ultrasonography, (TRCDUS) whether perfusion of the bladder and prostate is reduced in elderly patients with lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS), common in later life, as experimental data suggest that chronic ischaemia has a key role in the development of LUTS.
PATIENTS, SUBJECTS AND METHODS
In 32 elderly patients with LUTS (12 women, mean age 82.3 years, group 1; and 20 men, 79.4 years, group 2) perfusion of the bladder neck (in women) and of the bladder neck and prostate (in men) was measured using TRCDUS and the resistive index (RI) and colour pixel density (CPD) determined, assessed by a TRUS unit and special software. To assess the age‐related effect two control groups of 10 young healthy women (mean age 42.3 years, group 3) and 10 age‐matched healthy men (mean age 41.5 years, group 4) were also enrolled.
RESULTS
Irrespective of gender, there was markedly lower bladder perfusion in elderly patients with LUTS than in the younger subjects. The mean (sd) RI of the bladder neck in group 1, of 0.88 (0.06), and group 2, of 0.80 (0.08), was higher than in control groups 3, of 0.62 (0.05), and group 4, of 0.64 (0.09). The results were similar for the CPD measurements. The frequency of daily and nightly micturition showed a strong negative correlation with perfusion in the urinary bladder.
CONCLUSION
In elderly patients with LUTS there was decreased perfusion of the bladder neck and prostate when assessed using TRCDUS. Therefore, decreased perfusion in the urinary bladder might be responsible for the development of LUTS with advancing age.
Real-time elastography targeted biopsy allows prostate cancer detection in men with prostate specific antigen 1.25 ng/ml or greater and 4 ng/ml or less with a decreased number of cores compared with that of systematic biopsy.
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