Albert Driedger
University of Michigan
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Publication
Featured researches published by Albert Driedger.
Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 2011
Salem Yuoness; Irina Rachinsky; Albert Driedger; Tarik Belhocine
Chronic excess tearing or epiphora is seen in differentiated thyroid cancer patients who have received multiple doses of I-131 therapy. A 25-year-old woman with a papillary thyroid cancer received 6 doses of I-131 ( 37GBq) for I-131–avid lung metastases. The patient underwent a diagnostic I-131 whole-body scan plus SPECT/CT for a borderline thyroglobulin. I-131 whole-body scan demonstrated a right periorbital focus as shown in Figure 1, which was precisely localized on SPECT/CT at the right proximal nasolacrimal duct as shown in Figure 2. Dacryoscintigraphy documented a right high-grade obstruction as shown in Figures 3 and 4. The patient underwent a right dacryocystorhinostomy with a Crawford tube insertion. SPECT/CT allows anatofunctional definition of pathophysiological I-131 uptake patterns.
Orthopedics | 1991
R. Terry Thompson; Pamela M. Barton; G. D. Marsh; M G Peter Cameron; Denis Gravelle; Jane T.C. Hsieh; Keith C. Hayes; Albert Driedger
Changes in high energy phosphates (HEP) and intramuscular pH during exercise were measured in 17 patients with post-polio fatigue and in 28 healthy controls using 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). Subjects performed a dynamic hand grip exercise at low and high intensity. Mean changes in the HEP and pH showed no significant differences between the groups, although the post-polio groups response was highly variable. Six patients showed evidence of a lower lactate accumulation during the high intensity exercise when compared with controls. These data suggest that the whole body fatigue experienced by polio survivors is not related to any systemic metabolic abnormality.
The Open Medical Imaging Journal | 2008
Tarik Belhocine; Irina Rachinsky; Cigdem Akincioglu; Sanjay Gambhir; Brad Wilcox; William Vezina; Larry Stitt; Albert Driedger; Jean-Luc Urbain
Hybrid imaging is becoming a popular technology in nuclear medicine. We have evaluated the added value of an integrated SPECT/low-dose multislice CT over conventional planar/SPECT nuclear imaging. Phantom and clinical studies were performed on the Infinia™ Hawkeye™ 4 slice (HWK-4) with an upgraded software package (Xeleris 2.05v) from GE Heatlthcare to assess 1) the benefit of CT for contrast-resolution, attenuation correction, and anatomic localisation; 2) the impact of hybrid imaging in 456 consecutive patients in a clinical setting. SPECT/CT data were compared to conventional planar/SPECT data and correlated to clinical, biochemical, morphological imaging, angiography, and pathology findings. SPECT/CT was well tolerated by the patients with minimal CT irradiation dose (< 2mSv). HWK-4 provided useful attenuation correction for its routine use in MPI and accurate anatomic localisation of physiological and pathological foci in 99m Tc-RBC, 99m Tc-HMPAO-WBC, 131/123 I-MIBG, Octreoscan ® , and 67 Ga studies. Low-dose multislice CT also helped detect gross morphological abnormalities. Hybrid imaging had a significant impact in ProstaScint ® and parathyroid imaging for image-guided intervention. In bone imaging and differentiated thyroid cancers, SPECT/CT was able to clarify equivocal findings from planar whole-body scan. SPECT/CT was also found useful to precisely localize sentinel lymph nodes. Research protocols are being evaluated for half-time acquisition with resolution recovery and quantification of tracer distribution. SPECT/low-dose multislice CT has been successfully implemented in routine clinical practice. CT provided added value for effective attenuation correction and accurate anatomic localisation of disease with an impact on patient management.
Medical Imaging 2000: PACS Design and Evaluation: Engineering and Clinical Issues | 2000
Piotr J. Slomka; Edward Elliott; Albert Driedger
In medical imaging practice, images and reports often need be reviewed and edited from many locations. We have designed and implemented a Java-based Remote Viewing and Reporting System (JaRRViS) for a nuclear medicine department, which is deployed as a web service, at the fraction of the cost dedicated PACS systems. The system can be extended to other imaging modalities. JaRRViS interfaces to the clinical patient databases of imaging workstations. Specialized nuclear medicine applets support interactive displays of data such as 3-D gated SPECT with all the necessary options such as cine, filtering, dynamic lookup tables, and reorientation. The reporting module is implemented as a separate applet using Java Foundation Classes (JFC) Swing Editor Kit and allows composition of multimedia reports after selection and annotation of appropriate images. The reports are stored on the server in the HTML format. JaRRViS uses Java Servlets for the preparation and storage of final reports. The http links to the reports or to the patients raw images with applets can be obtained from JaRRViS by any Hospital Information System (HIS) via standard queries. Such links can be sent via e-mail or included as text fields in any HIS database, providing direct access to the patient reports and images via standard web browsers.
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2000
Naheel Alnafisi; Albert Driedger; Geoffrey Coates; Douglas J. Moote; Simon J. Raphael
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 1989
Norman R. Laurin; Albert Driedger; Gilbert A. Hurwitz; Adel G. Mattar; John Powe; Michael J. Chamberlain; Pamela Zabel; William Pavlosky
Thyroid | 2006
George Saab; Albert Driedger; William Pavlosky; T.J. McDonald; Ching-Yee O. Wong; John Yoo; Jean-Luc Urbain
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 1990
Ella A. Kazerooni; James C. Sisson; Brahm Shapiro; Milton D. Gross; Albert Driedger; Gilbert A. Hurwitz; Adel G. Mattar; Neil A. Petry
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2000
Piotr J. Slomka; Edward Elliott; Albert Driedger
Thyroid | 2007
Irina Rachinsky; Albert Driedger