Current Issue : January-March Volume : 2026 Issue Number : 1 Articles : 5 Articles
Background/Objectives: This study evaluated the applicability of B-mode ultrasound, Doppler, and elastography in the early diagnosis of non-azotemic acute kidney injury (AKI) in rats induced with cyclophosphamide. Methods: The prospective, randomized, and blinded experiment involved groups receiving cyclophosphamide (CG, n = 12) and saline (control, SG, n = 9). Serum biomarkers (urea, creatinine, and symmetric dimethylarginine) were assessed, along with renal histological analysis to classify AKI severity and distribution. Results: B-mode ultrasound revealed a significantly higher corticomedullary ratio at 24 and 72 h and increased renal width at 48 h in the cyclophosphamide group compared to controls. Biochemical analyses showed no significant differences between groups in early stages. Although B-mode ultrasound detected early morphological changes—specifically in corticomedullary ratio and renal size—Doppler and elastography demonstrated limited diagnostic utility in early AKI detection. Conclusions: Overall, B-mode ultrasound provided valuable early indicators of renal injury, whereas Doppler and elastography showed minimal clinical benefit at this stage....
Background: Interventional radiology (IR) has revolutionized patient care worldwide, yet its adoption and practice in sub-Saharan Africa remain inadequately characterized. Cameroon, with its growing radiology workforce, offers a unique opportunity to evaluate IR capacity, practitioner engagement, and predictors of procedural implementation. Materials and Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional survey of radiologists and senior radiology residents in Cameroon between. Eligible participants included radiologists and fourthyear residents across all major referral hospitals. Data collected encompassed demographic characteristics, IR training and qualifications, years of IR experience, availability of imaging modalities and IR suites, types and frequencies of IR procedures performed, and continuing education participation. All analyses were performed using SPSS version 23. Results: Seventy practitioners (61 radiologists, 9 senior residents; 39 males, 31 females) with a mean age of 38.2 (SD 5.0) years participated. None held a formal IR degree, and 61.4% reported ≤5 years of IR experience. Ultrasound was the most widely available modality (95.7%), while only seven practitioners (10.0%) had access to a dedicated IR suite. Overall, 39 participants (55.7%) performed IR procedures; however, all were classified as simple per Société Française de Radiologie criteria, and none performed vascular interventions. The most frequently performed procedures were exploratory puncture (87.2%) and collection evacuation (79.5%). In multivariable analysis, engagement in continuing IR education (p = 0.048) was the sole predicting factor and availability of advanced imaging equipment (p = 0.051) presented a borderline level of significance. Conclusion: Our findings reveal that while basic IR services are being adopted in Cameroon, significant gaps persist in advanced training, infrastructure, and procedural scope. Expansion of formal IR training programs and investment in dedicated IR suites and advanced imaging modalities are imperative to broaden the spectrum of minimally invasive treatments and improve patient outcomes. These insights should inform national health policy and international collaborative efforts to strengthen IR capacity in resource-limited settings....
Background: Endonasal endoscopic approaches to the skull base are still under investigation, with research aiming to achieve minimally invasive procedures that maximize resection while minimizing complications. This study shares our experience with a mononostril technique and compares it with the existing literature on mononostril approaches for sellar lesions. Methods: A systematic review of eight large series, totaling 1520 patients who underwent endoscopic mononostril transsphenoidal surgery, was performed. The surgical technique was detailed, and parameters such as resection completeness, operative time, complications, and nasal symptoms were analyzed. Results: Gross total resection ranged from 56% to 100% for non-functioning adenomas, 54% to 89% for hormone-secreting adenomas, and 83% to 100% for other sellar lesions. The most common complications were CSF leaks (1.5–4.1%) and nasal issues, such as epistaxis or sinusitis (0–6%). Internal carotid artery injury occurred in 0–1% of cases. The average surgical duration was 87 to 168 min. Conclusions: The mononostril approach offers comparable resection rates, CSF leak risks, and morbidity to binostril or microsurgical methods. The mononostril approach is fast, minimally invasive, and preserves the nasal mucosa, making it a viable option for many sellar lesions....
Background: Computed tomography urography (CTU) is routinely used to evaluate the upper urinary tract in patients with hematuria. CTU may detect incidental findings outside the urinary tract, but it remains unclear if this adds value. This study aimed to develop a deep learning algorithm that automatically segments and selectively visualizes the urinary tract on CTU. Methods: The urinary tract (kidneys, ureters, and urinary bladder) was manually segmented on 2 mm dual-phase CTU slices of 111 subjects. With this dataset, a deep learning-based AI was trained to automatically segment and selectively visualize the urinary tract on CTU scans (including accompanying unenhanced CT scans), which we dub “focused view CTU”. Focused view CTU was technically optimized and tested in 39 subjects with hematuria. Results: The technically optimized focused view CTU algorithm provided complete visualization of 97.4% of kidneys, 80.8% of ureters, and 94.9% of urinary bladders. All urinary tract organs were completely visualized in 66.6% of cases. In these cases (excluding 33.3% of cases with incomplete visualization), focused view CTU intrinsically achieved a sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of 100.0%, 92.3%, 92.9%, and 100.0% for lesions in the urinary tract compared to unmodified CT, although interrater agreement was moderate (κ = 0.528). All incidental findings were successfully hidden by focused view CTU. Conclusions: Focused view CTU provides adequate urinary tract segmentation in most cases, but further research is needed to optimize the technique (segmentation does not succeed in about one-third of cases). It offers selective urinary tract visualization, potentially aiding in assessing relevance and cost-effectiveness of detecting incidental findings in hematuria patients through a prospective randomized trial....
This study evaluates the relationship between preoperative cartilage quality, measured by T2 mapping, and patient-reported outcomes following labral tear treatment. We retrospectively reviewed patients aged 14–50 who underwent primary hip arthroscopy with either labral repair or reconstruction. Preoperative T2 values of femoral, acetabular, and labral tissue were assessed from MRI by blinded reviewers. International Hip Outcome Tool (iHOT-12) scores were collected preoperatively and up to two years postoperatively. Associations between T2 values and iHOT-12 scores were analyzed using univariate mixed linear models. Twenty-nine patients were included (mean age of 32.5 years, BMI 24 kg/m2, 48.3% female, and 22 repairs). Across all patients, higher T2 values were associated with higher iHOT-12 scores at baseline and early postoperative timepoints (three months for cartilage and six months for labrum; p < 0.05). Lower T2 values were associated with higher 12- and 24-month iHOT-12 scores across all structures (p < 0.001). Similar trends were observed within the repair and reconstruction subgroups, with delayed negative associations correlating with worse tissue quality. T2 mapping showed time-dependent correlations with iHOT-12 scores, indicating that worse cartilage or labral quality predicts poorer long-term outcomes. These findings support the utility of T2 mapping as a preoperative tool for prognosis in hip preservation surgery....
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