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Dive into the research topics where C. Bru is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Bru.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2008

Noninvasive Prediction of Clinically Significant Portal Hypertension and Esophageal Varices in Patients With Compensated Liver Cirrhosis

Annalisa Berzigotti; Rosa Gilabert; Juan G. Abraldes; Carlos Nicolau; C. Bru; Jaime Bosch; Juan C. García-Pagán

OBJECTIVES:We aimed to develop a model based on noninvasive variables for the prediction of clinically significant portal hypertension (CSPH) and of esophageal varices (EV) in patients with compensated liver disease.METHODS:Sixty patients with compensated liver cirrhosis diagnosed by histology were included in the training set. All patients had physical examination, laboratory tests, abdominal color-Doppler ultrasound, upper digestive tract endoscopy, and measurement of hepatic venous pressure gradient. Predictive models for the presence of CSPH and of EV were calculated. The models were validated in an independent series of 74 patients with compensated liver disease.RESULTS:Clinical and laboratory variables were selected in the final models, while ultrasonography did not add statistical power for the prediction of CSPH and EV. The model for prediction of CSPH included albumin, INR, and ALT. The best cutoff had 93% sensitivity and 61% specificity in the training set, and correctly classified 77% of patients in the validation set. Spider angiomas, ALT, and albumin predicted EV. The best cutoff of the model in the training set had a sensitivity of 93% and a specificity of 37% and correctly classified 72% of cases in the validation set.CONCLUSIONS:Noninvasive prediction of EV in well-compensated cirrhotic patients is not accurate. However, a model obtained by combining simple laboratory variables has a high sensitivity to predict CSPH in this population and may be useful to select the subset of patients requiring screening endoscopy. By this method, endoscopic screening could be obviated in about 40% of patients.


European Radiology | 2007

Characterization of focal liver lesions: comparative study of contrast-enhanced ultrasound versus spiral computed tomography

V. Catala; Carlos Nicolau; Ramon Vilana; Mario Pagés; Luis Bianchi; Marcelo Sánchez; C. Bru

The purpose of this study was to compare the diagnostic accuracy of contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) with spiral computed tomography (SCT) for the characterization of focal liver lesions (FLL) and to determine the degree of correlation between the two techniques. Seventy-seven FLL (45 hepatocellular carcinomas; 12 metastases; ten hemangiomas; two regenerating/dysplastic nodules; eight focal nodular hyperplasias) detected with ultrasound (US) were prospectively evaluated by CEUS using a second-generation contrast agent and SCT (with an interval of no more than one month between the two techniques). Independent observers made the most probable diagnosis and the results were compared with the final diagnoses (histology n = 59; MRI n = 18). Statistical analysis was performed by the Chi-square and Kappa tests. CEUS provided a correct, specific diagnosis in 69/77 (90%) of the FLL, while SCT did so in 67/77 (87%). The sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic accuracy for malignancy were 91%, 90%, and 91%, respectively, for CEUS and 88%, 89%, and 88%, respectively, for SCT. No statistically significant difference was found between CEUS and SCT in the characterization of FLL (p > 0.05). In addition, agreement between the two imaging techniques was good (k = 0.75). We conclude that CEUS and SCT provide a similar diagnostic accuracy in the characterization of FLL, with a good degree of correlation between the two techniques.


The Lancet | 2000

Sonographic assessment of regional fat in HIV-1-infected people.

Esteban Martínez; Luis Bianchi; Miguel A. Garcia-Viejo; C. Bru; José M. Gatell

The routine clinical assessment of lipodystrophy in HIV-1-infected patients is hindered by the absence of easy and reliable methods to measure regional fat. We used sonography to measure subcutaneous fat thickness at three reference skin points (periumbilical, brachial, and malar) and intra-abdominal fat thickness in HIV-1-infected patients with and without lipodystrophy and in healthy controls. Patients without lipodystrophy had less subcutaneous fat than uninfected controls. Sonographic assessment of subcutaneous malar and brachial fat in patients with lipodystrophy was more sensitive and specific than that of intra-abdominal fat in the diagnosis of abnormal fat distribution.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2009

Doppler Ultrasound Findings in the Hepatic Artery Shortly After Liver Transplantation

Ángeles García-Criado; Rosa Gilabert; Annalisa Berzigotti; C. Bru

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this article is to describe the Doppler waveform findings in the hepatic artery in the early posttransplantation period, both in the absence and presence of arterial complications. CONCLUSION The presence of transient high-resistance Doppler waveforms in normal hepatic arteries is a common finding after grafting. Hepatic artery thrombosis and stenosis, and arterial steal syndromes can be diagnosed by Doppler in the early liver transplantation period.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1989

Diagnostic Accuracy of Fine-Needle Aspiration Biopsy in Patients with Hepatocellular Carcinoma

C. Bru; Albert Maroto; Jordi Bruix; Ramón Faus; Lluís Bianchi; Xavier Calvet; Carmen Ayuso; Ramon Vilana; Rosa Gilabert; Joan Rodés

The present study was undertaken to investigate the diagnostic usefulness of fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) in a large series of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) seen over a 1-year period. During 1986, ultrasonographically guided percutaneous FNAB was performed in 72 patients with suspected HCC. A final diagnosis of HCC was made in 58 patients. The presence or absence of HCC was ascertained by histological examination and/or by other diagnostic procedures (α1-fetoprotein, computed tomography, arteriography) and by clinical follow-up (repeated ultrasonographic controls) and/or by surgery or necropsy. A total of 61 FNABs were carried out in these 58 patients. Only 42 (69%) of the 61 FNABs allowed the diagnosis of HCC. This moderate diagnostic sensitivity was not related to tumor size. Only one false positive result was observed in the non-HCC group. Therefore, the diagnostic specificity of FNAB for HCC was 93%, with a positive predictive value of 97% and a negative predictive value of 40%. These results show that FNAB is a useful diagnostic technique in patients with HCC. However, these data also show that there is a large proportion (31%) of subjects with false negative results. Therefore, we suggest that further efforts should be made to improve the diagnostic accuracy of this procedure.


Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 2005

Value of Doppler Sonography for Predicting Clinical Outcome After Renal Artery Revascularization in Atherosclerotic Renal Artery Stenosis

Ángeles García-Criado; Rosa Gilabert; Carlos Nicolau; Maria Isabel Real; Xavier Muntañá; Jordi Blasco; Sergi Ganau; C. Bru

The purpose of this study was to prospectively evaluate the usefulness of Doppler sonography for predicting blood pressure and renal function improvement after percutaneous renal angioplasty in patients with unilateral atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis.


Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 1993

Sonographic diagnosis and hemodynamic correlation in veno-occlusive disease of the liver.

Carlos Nicolau; C. Bru; E Carreras; J Bosch; Luis Bianchi; Rosa Gilabert; Ramon Vilana

This study evaluated the role of duplex Doppler sonography in the diagnosis of VOD of the liver after bone marrow transplantation. Sixteen patients with clinical criteria of VOD were studied. The final diagnosis was achieved by transjugular liver biopsy, and the hepatic venous pressure gradient was measured during the procedure to estimate portal pressure. Nine patients (56.2%) had histologically proved VOD. Gallbladder wall thickening was present in 75% of patients with VOD, but in none of those without it (P = 0.01). Gallbladder wall thickening and ascites were present only in patients with portal hypertension. Nine patients (five with VOD and four without it) also were evaluated with duplex Doppler sonography, and no obvious flow abnormalities were detected in the portal vein and hepatic veins. These results suggest that sonography is useful in detecting early signs of portal hypertension pointing to the diagnosis of VOD in patients with bone marrow transplantation.


Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2003

Transrectal prostatic ultrasonography in acute bacterial prostatitis: findings and clinical implications.

Juan Pablo Horcajada; Ramon Vilana; Antonio Moreno-Martínez; Ricardo Alvarez-vijande; C. Bru; Xavier Bargalló; Laura Buñesch; Jose A. Martinez; Josep Mensa

To evaluate the role of transrectal ultrasonography (TRUS) in the diagnosis of acute bacterial prostatitis (ABP) and to analyse the possible relationship between sonographic findings and clinical presentation and evolution, a prospective study using TRUS in patients with ABP was conducted. 45 patients (aged 58.2±14.6 y; mean±SD) with a clinical diagnosis of ABP admitted to a university hospital were studied prospectively. Clinical, analytical and microbiological data were recorded. TRUS was performed on admission and after 1 month of antibiotic therapy. Findings were correlated with clinical and evolutive data. The mean prostatic volume on admission was 40.5±17.9 ml. 21 patients (46.6%) had sonographically demonstrable lesions in peripheral prostatic lobules. One month later, when treatment had ended, lesions had disappeared or improved in 61.1% of patients, and the mean prostatic volume was 24.3±10.5 ml (p<0.0005). Clinical, analytical and microbiological data and evolution of ABP were not significantly different in patients with or without sonographically demonstrable lesions. TRUS does not need to be performed in every patient with suspicion of ABP; the only indication for TRUS in ABP is the exclusion of prostatic abscess.


Radiología | 2010

Carcinoma hepatocelular: diagnóstico, estadificación y estrategia terapéutica

Ramon Vilana; Alejandro Forner; Á. García; Carmen Ayuso; C. Bru

Hepatocellular carcinoma is a tumor with a high incidence and high mortality. These data justify screening programs to enable curative treatments to improve survival rates. Screening the population at risk (mainly patients with cirrhosis of the liver) should include ultrasonographic examination twice yearly. Given the vascular characteristics of hepatocellular carcinoma, it can be detected using dynamic techniques (contrast-enhanced ultrasonography, CT, and MRI). In cases in which the enhancement pattern is not characteristic, these techniques should be complemented with lesion biopsy. Once hepatocellular carcinoma is diagnosed, the tumor is staged, and together with the clinical condition of the patient, the stage will determine the most appropriate treatment strategy in each case.


European Journal of Radiology | 2018

Diagnosis and staging of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC): current guidelines

Carmen Ayuso; Jordi Rimola; Ramon Vilana; Marta Burrel; Anna Darnell; Ángeles García-Criado; Luis Bianchi; Ernest Belmonte; Carla Caparroz; Marta Barrufet; Jordi Bruix; C. Bru

One of the key strategies to improve the prognosis of HCC, beside prevention, is to diagnose the tumor in early stages, when the patient is asymptomatic and the liver function is preserved, because in this clinical situation effective therapies with survival benefit can be applied. Imaging techniques are a key tool in the surveillance and diagnosis of HCC. Screening should be based in US every 6 months and non-invasive diagnostic criteria of HCC based on imaging findings on dynamic-MR and/or dynamic-CT have been validated and thus, accepted in clinical guidelines. The typical vascular pattern depicted by HCC on CT and or MRI consists on arterial enhancement, stronger than the surrounding liver (wash-in), and hypodensity or hyposignal intensity compared to the surrounding liver (wash-out) in the venous phase. This has a sensitivity of around 60% with a 96-100% specificity. Major improvements on liver imaging have been introduced in the latest years, adding functional information that can be quantified: the use of hepatobiliary contrast media for liver MRI, the inclusion of diffusion-weighted sequences in the standard protocols for liver MRI studies and new radiotracers for positron-emission tomography (PET). However, all them are still a matter of research prior to be incorporated in evidence based clinical decision making. This review summarizes the current knowledge about imaging techniques for the early diagnosis and staging of HCC, and it discusses the most relevant open questions.

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Ramon Vilana

University of Barcelona

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Luis Bianchi

University of Barcelona

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Carmen Ayuso

University of Barcelona

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Jordi Bruix

University of Barcelona

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Á. García

University of Barcelona

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