Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where B. David Collier is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by B. David Collier.


Seminars in Nuclear Medicine | 1997

Diagnostic bone scanning in oncology

Krasnow Az; Robert S. Hellman; Michael E. Timins; B. David Collier; Tom Anderson; Isitman At

Over the last several decades bone scanning has been used extensively in the evaluation of oncology patients to detect bone involvement. It can provide information about disease location, prognosis, and the effect of therapy. Bone scanning offers the advantages of whole body evaluation and the detection of lesions earlier than other techniques. However, as newer diagnostic tools become available, indications for bone scanning must be revised and the results combined with these other tests in order to provide optimum patient care. Advances in instrumentation and the subsequent improvement in image quality have allowed nuclear medicine physicians to provide more accurate bone scan interpretations. By optimizing image acquisition, it is often possible to determine lesion characteristics, which are more likely to represent malignancy. Knowledge of disease pathophysiology and other specific properties of the patients primary tumor, along with subsequent correlation of scan abnormalities to patient history, physical examination, previous studies, and other radiological examinations, is essential for determining lesion significance. The differential diagnosis of a scan abnormality should also include consideration of both false normal and abnormal causes. The final interpretation should be clearly communicated to the clinician with appropriate recommendations for further evaluation. Only through careful attention to the patient, the clinician, and appropriate study acquisition parameters will bone scanning maintain its place in the evaluation of oncology patients.


Foot & Ankle International | 1996

Prospective Study of Bone, lndium-111-Labeled White Blood Cell, and Gallium-67 Scanning for the Evaluation of Osteomyelitis in the Diabetic Foot

Jeffrey E. Johnson; E. Jeff Kennedy; Michael J. Shereff; Patel N; B. David Collier

Twenty-two adult diabetic patients with clinical suspicion of foot and/or ankle infection were prospectively evaluated using radiography, technetium-99m methylene diphosphonate bone scanning (99Tc), indium-111-labeled leukocyte scanning (111In), and gallium-67 scanning (67Ga) to determine the presence of clinically suspected osteomyelitis. Biopsy for culture and histology was performed in 16 patients. The diagnosis of osteomyelitis was confirmed by biopsy in 12 patients. The remaining 10 patients had no evidence of osteomyelitis with long-term follow-up. 99mTc was snown to be of limited valued when used alone in these patients with peripheral neuropathy. 67Ga, either alone or in combination with 99mTc bone scanning, was of little diagnostic value and gave no additional information that was not available from 111In. The combination of three-phase 99mTc and 111In had the highest diagnostic efficacy (100% sensitivity, 80% specificity, and 91% accuracy), followed closely by 111In alone (100% sensitivity, 70% specificity, and 86% accuracy). We conclude that for adult diabetic patients with clinical suspicion of osteomyelitis but no radiographic findings of that disease, 111In alone is an appropriate nuclear medicine evaluation for ruling out infection if it is negative. However, if an area of 111In white blood cell uptake is present, a “simultaneous” 99mTc is often helpful in providing the anatomic correlation to differentiate osteomyelitis from infection that is limited to soft tissue.


Gastroenterology | 1988

Efficacy of Quantitative Hepatobiliary Scintigraphy and Fatty-Meal Sonography for Evaluating Patients With Suspected Partial Common Duct Obstruction

Rm Darweesh; Wylie J. Dodds; Walter J. Hogan; Joseph E. Geenen; B. David Collier; Reza Shaker; Sm Kishk; Edward T. Stewart; Thomas L. Lawson; Effat H. Hassanein; Thomas M. Joestgen

In this study we evaluated by blinded design the diagnostic efficacy of two noninvasive techniques, quantitative hepatobiliary scintigraphy (QHS) and fatty-meal sonography (FMS), for evaluating patients with suspected partial common duct obstruction. Quantitative hepatobiliary scintigraphy was performed on 56 cholecystectomized individuals (22 asymptomatic controls, 28 patients with suspected partial common duct obstruction, and 6 nonjaundiced cirrhotics) and FMS was done in 51 cases. For QHS, time-activity curves were generated for regions of interest over the liver, hepatic hilum, and common duct. For FMS, we measured common duct diameter before and 45 min after a fatty meal (Lipomul, 1.5 ml/kg). Each of the 28 patients with suspected partial common duct obstruction and 6 cirrhotic patients underwent endoscopic retrograde cholangiography, often accompanied by sphincter of Oddi manometry. Findings from these examinations were taken as the gold standard to determine the presence or absence of conditions that could account for intermittent symptomatic partial common duct obstruction. The most sensitive indicators for a positive test were a 45-min isotope clearance of less than 63% for QHS and a common duct increase of greater than or equal to 2 mm after the fatty meal for FMS. Of 28 patients with suspected partial common duct obstruction, 15 were judged to be true-positive and 13 true-negative. The 6 cirrhotic patients were without common duct obstruction. The study findings showed that each test had a 67% sensitivity that improved to 80% when the findings from both test results were combined. The specificity of QHS was 85% and that of FMS was 100%. All 6 cirrhotic patients had negative findings on FMS and 4 were false-positive on QHS. The true-positives included 8 patients with a small common duct stone and 6 with obstructive sphincter of Oddi dysfunction (4 stenosis, 2 dyskinesia). We conclude that noninvasive QHS and FMS afford good sensitivity and specificity for evaluating cholecystectomized patients with suspected partial common duct obstruction.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2000

Dobutamine-atropine stress echocardiography and dipyridamole sestamibi scintigraphy for the detection of coronary artery disease : Limitations and concordance

Steven C. Smart; Aneeta Bhatia; Robert Hellman; Thomas R. Stoiber; T. Arthur Krasnow; B. David Collier; Kiran B. Sagar

OBJECTIVES We sought to compare dobutamine-atropine stress echocardiography (DASE) and dipyridamole Technetium 99-m (Tc-99m) sestamibi single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) scintigraphy (DMIBI) for detecting coronary artery disease (CAD). BACKGROUND Both DASE and DMIBI are effective for evaluating patients for CAD, but their concordance and limitations have not been directly compared. METHODS To investigate these aims, patients underwent multistage DASE, DMIBI and coronary angiography within three months. Dobutamine-atropine stress echocardiography and stress-rest DMIBI were performed according to standard techniques and analyzed for their accuracy in predicting the extent of CAD. Segments were assigned to vascular territories according to standard models. Angiography was performed using the Judkins technique. RESULTS The 183 patients (mean age: 60 +/- 11 years, including 50 women) consisted of 64 patients with no coronary disease and 61 with single-, 40 with two- and 18 with three-vessel coronary disease. Dobutamine-atropine stress echocardiography and DMIBI were similarly sensitive (87%, 104/119 and 80%, 95/119, respectively) for the detection of CAD, but DASE was more specific (91%, 58/64 vs. 73%, 47/64, p < 0.01). Sensitivity was similar for the detection of CAD in patients with single-vessel disease (84%, 51/61 vs. 74%, 45/61, respectively) and multivessel disease (91%, 53/58 vs. 86%, 50/58, respectively). Multiple wall motion abnormalities and perfusion defects were similarly sensitive for multivessel disease (72%, 42/58 vs. 66%, 38/53, respectively), but, again, DASE was more specific than DMIBI (95%, 119/125 vs. 76%, 95/125, respectively, p < 0.01). Dobutamine-atropine stress echocardiography and DMIBI were moderately concordant for the detection and extent of CAD (Kappa 0.47, p < 0.0001) but were only fairly (Kappa 0.35, p < 0.001) concordant for the type of abnormalities (normal, fixed, ischemia or mixed). CONCLUSIONS Dobutamine-atropine stress echocardiography and DMIBI were comparable tests for the detection of CAD. Both were very sensitive for the detection of CAD and moderately sensitive for the extent of disease. The only advantage of DASE was greater specificity, especially for multivessel disease. Dobutamine-atropine stress echocardiography may be advantageous in patients with lower probabilities of CAD.


Brain and Language | 1989

The effect of thalamic stimulation in processing of verbal stimuli in dichotic listening tasks: A case study

Subhash C. Bhatnager; Orlando J. Andy; Edward W. Korabic; Ronald S. Tikofsky; Varun K. Saxena; Robert S. Hellman; B. David Collier; Linda D. Krohn

In dichotic listening tasks, the (dominant) right ears superiority in processing verbal stimuli has been attributed to its direct anatomic connection with the left dominant hemisphere. The role played by extralinguistic factors, such as attention and functional tuning of the associated cortical structures, has not been carefully examined. This investigation was undertaken to evaluate the effects of the left thalamic electric stimulation on the processing (recognition and recall) of dichotically presented CVC verbal stimuli in a patient being treated for chronic pain. We report the positive effects of electric stimulation (confirmed by increased subcortical metabolic activity using SPECT, a brain imaging technique) on the processing of dichotically presented verbal stimuli.


Skeletal Radiology | 1987

Painful pseudarthrosis following lumbar spinal fusion: detection by combined SPECT and planar bone scintigraphy

Walter J. Slizofski; B. David Collier; Thomas J. Flatley; Guillermo F. Carrera; Robert S. Hellman; Isitman At

Twenty-six adult patients more than 6-months post-lumbar spinal fusion were studied. Flexion and extension radiographs showing motion or bone scintigrams showing focal areas of increased activity within the fusion mass were considered positive for pseudarthrosis. Patients were classified as either symptomatic or asymptomatic. Among the 15 symptomatic patients, scintigraphy had a sensitivity of 0.78 and a specificity of 0.83 which was superior to the 0.43 sensitivity and 0.50 specificity of radiography. Six of the 11 asymptomatic patients had focal areas of increased activity in the bony fusion mass, possibly reflecting painless pseudarthrosis. Planar imaging was substantially enhanced by SPECT in 14 of the 26 cases. It is concluded that for the patient who remains symptomatic after lumbar spinal fusion, bone scintigraphy with SPECT is of significant value in detecting painful pseudarthrosis.


American Heart Journal | 1997

Low dose dobutamine echocardiography is more predictive of reversible dysfunction after acute myocardial infarction than resting single photon emission computed tomographic thallium-201 scintigraphy

Steven C. Smart; Thomas R. Stoiber; Robert Hellman; John Duchak; John C. Wynsen; Mehmet Kitapci; Isitman At; Krasnow Az; B. David Collier; Kiran B. Sagar

To directly compare dobutamine echocardiography and resting single photon emission computed tomographic (SPECT) thallium-201 (Tl-201) scintigraphy for the detection of reversible dysfunction, 64 patients underwent dobutomine echocardiography (baseline, low dose 5 and 10 mg/kg/min, and peak dose), rest Tl-201 scintigraphy (3 mCi - 15 minute and 3- to 4-hour SPECT imaging), and coronary angiography during the first week after acute myocardial infarction. Follow-up echocardiography was performed 4 to 8 weeks after discharge. Wall thickening improved at follow-up in 52% (207 of 399) of the dysfunctional segments. By receiver operating characteristic analysis, biphasic responses and sustained improvement during dobutamine echocardiography were more accurate (p < 0.01) than Tl-201 uptake by SPECT scintigraphy for reversible dysfunction. The greater accuracy of dobutamine echocardiography resulted from higher accuracy in akinetic segments, Q wave infarction, and multivessel coronary artery disease. In conclusion, dobutamine echocardiography was more accurate than resting SPECT Tl-201 scintigraphy for reversible dysfunction after acute myocardial infarction.


Journal of Neuro-oncology | 1994

Selective incorporation of111In-labeled PHOTOFRIN™ by glioma tissuein vivo

Harry T. Whelan; Lucy H. Kras; Kutlan Ozker; Dawn M. Bajic; Meic H. Schmidt; Yu Liu; Lisa Ann Trembath; Fusun Uzum; Glenn A. Meyer; Annette D. Segura; B. David Collier

The use of PHOTOFRIN™ for photodynamic therapy of human gliomas has been studied by i.v. administration and laser photosensitization. Defining the uptake of PHOTOFRIN™ in the patients tumor in comparison with the surrounding normal brain tissue is highly desirable for patient selection and study ofin vivo kinetics. We utilized a non-invasive approach to the detection of PHOTOFRIN™ uptake in brain tumors with111In-oxine radiolabeled PHOTOFRIN™ and external imaging and quantitation using a gamma camera. Biodistribution of111In-labeled PHOTOFRIN™ in 13 organs was determined in four dogs and 15 mice with gliomas.99mTc-DTPA was used as a control for nonspecific uptake. The greatest concentration of111In-PHOTOFRIN™ in the brain tumor occurred at 24 hours post i.v. administration. The brain tumor PHOTOFRIN™ uptake was seven times greater than that of normal brain. The decreased blood background at 72 hours made this the optimum time for imaging. Specific tumor tissue uptake of111In-PHOTOFRIN™ occurred, well beyond that resulting from blood-brain-barrier (BBB) breakdown.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 1992

High-resolution bone scintigraphy of the adult wrist

Patel N; B. David Collier; Guillermo F. Carrera; Douglas P. Hanel; James R. Sanger; Hani S. Matloub; Donald A. Hackbarth; Krasnow Az; Robert S. Hellman; Isitman At

Bony anatomic landmarks of the wrist (e.g., pisiform, hook of hamate, radioulnar joint, and styloid processes of the radius and ulna) were routinely identified in 28 adult patients examined for wrist pain. With the wrists prone and immobilized, bone scintigrams were obtained for 500,000 counts with an asymmetric (133 to 161 keV) Tc-99m energy window and either a converging (best choice) or straight-bore, high-resolution collimator. High-resolution scintigraphy precisely localized degenerative joint disease (nine patients), scaphoid fractures (five), pisiform fracture (one), lunate avascular necrosis (one), radioulnar arthritis (one), septic or inflammatory arthritis (six), ulnocarpal impingement (two), and reflex sympathetic dystrophy syndrome (two). Images obtained palm down with the wrist in ulnar deviation helped identify increased uptake within the scaphoid. Fracture and significant bone or joint disease were excluded in one patient.


Foot & Ankle International | 1995

Stress Fracture of the Tibia Following Extensive Hindfoot and Ankle Arthrodesis: A Report of Three Cases

James R. Mitchell; Jeffrey E. Johnson; B. David Collier; John S. Gould

Arthrodesis of the hindfoot and/or ankle is a commonly performed procedure for ankle or subtalar joint arthritis. Extensive arthrodesis for involvement of both the ankle and subtalar joints is performed more rarely, but is not uncommon. In all cases of hindfoot and ankle arthrodesis, positioning of the foot relative to the mechanical axis of the limb is extremely important. With proper alignment of the foot and appropriate shoe wear modifications, near normal gait can be

Collaboration


Dive into the B. David Collier's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Isitman At

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert S. Hellman

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Krasnow Az

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guillermo F. Carrera

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kiran B. Sagar

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gur Akansel

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patel N

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert Hellman

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ronald S. Tikofsky

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge