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Dive into the research topics where Diana Gaitini is active.

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Featured researches published by Diana Gaitini.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2008

Fever of Unknown Origin: The Role of 18F-FDG PET/CT

Zohar Keidar; Alexandra Gurman-Balbir; Diana Gaitini; Ora Israel

Fever of unknown origin (FUO) is a challenging diagnostic problem. Timely identification and precise localization of the causing process are critical for appropriate patient management. The present prospective study evaluates the role of PET/CT using 18F-FDG in the investigation of FUO. Methods: A total of 48 consecutive patients (25 men, 23 women; age range, 24–82 y) with FUO underwent 18F-FDG PET/CT scans. FUO was defined as a fever of more than 38.3°C that lasted for more than 3 wk and failure to reach diagnosis after more than 1 wk of inpatient investigation. The performance of PET/CT for identifying the etiology of FUO was assessed. Final diagnosis was based on histopathology, microbiologic assays, or clinical and imaging follow-up. Results: PET/CT detected suggestive foci of increased 18F-FDG uptake in 27 patients. In 22 of these 27 positive studies (81%), PET/CT identified the underlying disease and diagnosed infection in 9 patients, an inflammatory process in 10 patients, and malignancy in 3 patients. 18F-FDG PET/CT was negative in 21 patients. All these patients were diagnosed as having systemic nonfocal infection or drug-induced fever or showed spontaneous resolution of the febrile state with no further evidence of a localized inflammatory, infectious, or malignant process for a clinical follow-up period of 12–36 mo. Conclusion: 18F-FDG PET/CT identified the underlying cause of the fever in 46% of the present study population and contributed to the diagnosis or exclusion of a focal pathologic etiology of the febrile state in 90% of patients. 18F-FDG PET/CT has a high negative predictive value (100%) for assessment of FUO. If confirmed by further studies, 18F-FDG PET/CT may be used in the future as an initial noninvasive diagnostic modality for assessment of this group of patients.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2005

The additional value of PET/CT over PET in FDG imaging of oesophageal cancer

Rachel Bar-Shalom; Ludmila Guralnik; Medy Tsalic; Max Leiderman; Alex Frenkel; Diana Gaitini; Alon Ben-Nun; Zohar Keidar; Ora Israel

PurposeThe aim of this study was to assess the value of combined PET/CT compared with PET reviewed side-by-side with CT, in patients with oesophageal cancer, before and after surgery.MethodsForty-one FDG PET/CT studies were performed in 32 patients with oesophageal cancer, before surgery (n=18) or during follow-up after resection of the primary tumour (n=23). One hundred and fifteen sites suspicious for malignancy were evaluated. PET/CT was prospectively compared with PET reviewed side-by-side with CT, for detection, accurate localisation and characterisation of malignant sites. PET/CT performance in different anatomical regions was compared before and after surgery. The impact of fused data on patient management was retrospectively assessed.Results PET/CT had an incremental value over PET for interpretation of 25 of 115 sites (22%), changing the initial characterisation of ten sites to either malignant (n=1) or benign (n=9), and defining the precise anatomical location of 15 sites. PET/CT provided better specificity and accuracy than PET for detecting sites of oesophageal cancer (81% and 90% vs 59% and 83% respectively, p<0.01). Fusion was of special value for interpretation of cervical and abdomino-pelvic sites, for disease assessment in loco-regional lymph nodes before surgery and in regions of postoperative anatomical distortion. PET/CT had an impact on the further management of four patients (10%), by detecting nodal metastases that warranted disease upstaging (n=2) and by excluding disease in sites of benign uptake after surgery (n=2).ConclusionPET/CT improves the accuracy of FDG imaging in oesophageal cancer and provides data of diagnostic and therapeutic significance for further patient management.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2008

Diagnosing Acute Appendicitis in Adults: Accuracy of Color Doppler Sonography and MDCT Compared with Surgery and Clinical Follow-Up

Diana Gaitini; Nira Beck-Razi; David Mor-Yosef; Doron Fischer; Ofer Ben Itzhak; Michael M. Krausz; Ahuva Engel

OBJECTIVE The objective of our study was to evaluate the accuracy of color Doppler sonography and contrast-enhanced MDCT in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis in adults and their utility as a triage tool in lower abdominal pain. MATERIALS AND METHODS We reviewed the medical records of 420 consecutive adult patients, 271 women and 149 men, 18 years old or older, referred from the emergency department to sonography examination for clinically suspected acute appendicitis between January 2003 and June 2006. Patients underwent sonography of the right upper abdomen and pelvis followed by graded compression and color Doppler sonography of the right lower quadrant. CT was performed in 132 patients due to inconclusive sonography findings or a discrepancy between the clinical diagnosis and the sonography diagnosis. Sonography and CT reports were compared with surgery or clinical follow-up as the reference standard. Statistical analyses were performed by Pearsons chi-square test and cross-tabulation software. RESULTS Sonography and CT correctly diagnosed acute appendicitis in 66 of 75 patients and in 38 of 39 patients, respectively, and correctly denied acute appendicitis in 312 of 326 and in 92 of 92 patients. Sonography was inconclusive in 17 of 418 cases and CT, in one of 132 cases. Sonography and CT allowed alternative diagnoses in 82 and 42 patients, respectively. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and accuracy for sonography were 74.2%, 97%, 88%, 93%, and 92%, respectively, and for CT, 100%, 98.9%, 97.4%, 100%, and 99%. CONCLUSION Sonography should be the first imaging technique in adult patients for the diagnosis of acute appendicitis and triage of acute abdominal pain. CT should be used as a complementary study for selected cases.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2011

Carotid Plaque Vulnerability: Quantification of Neovascularization on Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound With Histopathologic Correlation

Assaf Hoogi; Dan Adam; Aaron Hoffman; Hedviga Kerner; Shimon Reisner; Diana Gaitini

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this research is to develop a computerized method to quantify carotid plaque neovascularization on contrast-enhanced ultrasound images and to compare the results with the histopathologic analysis of the plaque. SUBJECTS AND METHODS Twenty-seven patients (age range, 48-84 years; mean [± SD] age, 68.4 ± 9.72 years) were recruited before endarterectomy. Contrast-enhanced ultrasound examination of the carotid artery was performed by applying low mechanical index and harmonics with pulse inversion. An algorithm was developed that implemented several image processing methods to automatically quantify neovascularization and reconstruct the vascular tree in the atheromatous plaque. Neovascularization and the number of inflammatory cells seen on histopathologic analysis of the plaque after endarterectomy were compared with neovascularization determined by the computerized method. The mean (± SD) ratios of the ultrasound and histopathologic measurements were calculated. RESULTS In five patients, heavy calcification of the plaque prevented visualization of plaque texture. Intraplaque neovascularization on contrast-enhanced ultrasound images was significant in 19 patients and low in three patients. The ratio of the neovascularization area to the total plaque area on contrast-enhanced ultrasound images was well correlated with the same histopathologic ratio (R(2) = 0.7905) and with the number of inflammatory cells present in the plaque (R(2) = 0.6109). The histopathologic ratio and the number of intraplaque inflammatory cells also were well correlated (R(2) = 0.7034). CONCLUSION The newly developed method allowed quantification of the intraplaque neovascularization as a feature of vulnerability in the carotid plaque and proved to be highly correlated with histopathologic results.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2008

FDG avidity and PET/CT patterns in primary gastric lymphoma.

Lea Radan; Doron Fischer; Rachel Bar-Shalom; Eldad J. Dann; Ron Epelbaum; Nissim Haim; Diana Gaitini; Ora Israel

PurposeThe use of 18F-fluoro-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT) in primary gastric lymphoma (PGL) is challenging due to physiologic FDG activity in the stomach and variability in the degree of uptake in various histologic subtypes. This study assesses FDG avidity and PET/CT patterns in newly diagnosed PGL.MethodsSixty-two PET/CT studies of newly diagnosed PGL were reviewed (24 low-grade mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue [MALT], 38 aggressive non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma [AGNHL]). FDG avidity, patterns (focal/diffuse), and intensity (visually vs. the liver and SUVmax) were assessed and compared to 27 controls. Gastric CT abnormalities and extragastric sites were recorded.ResultsGastric FDG uptake was found in 55/62 (89%) PGL (71% MALT vs. 100% AGNHL, p < 0.001) and 63% controls. A diffuse pattern was found in 60% PGL (76% MALT vs. 53% AGNHL, p = NS) and 47% controls. FDG uptake higher than liver was found in 82% PGL (58% MALT vs. 97% AGNHL, p < 0.05) and 63% controls. SUVmax in FDG-avid PGLs was 15.3 ± 11.7 (5.4 ± 2.9 MALT vs. 19.7 ± 11.5 AGNHL, p < 0.001) and 4.6 ± 1.4 in controls. CT abnormalities were found in 79% PGL (thickening, n = 49; ulcerations, n = 22). Extra-gastric FDG-avid sites were seen in none of MALT, but 61% of AGNHL (nodal, n = 18; nodal and extranodal, n = 5).ConclusionsFDG avidity was present in 89% of PGLs, including all patients with AGNHL but only 71% of MALT. FDG uptake can be differentiated, in particular in AGNHL-PGL, from physiologic tracer activity by intensity but not by pattern. Extragastric foci on PET and structural CT abnormalities are additional parameters that can improve PET/CT assessment of PGL. Defining FDG avidity and PET/CT patterns in AGNHL and a subgroup of MALT-PGL before treatment may be important for further monitoring therapy response.


Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 2005

Diagnosing Carotid Stenosis by Doppler Sonography State of the Art

Diana Gaitini; Michalle Soudack

The goal of this review article is to present the state of the art in the clinical applications and technical performance and interpretation of carotid sonographic examinations.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1995

Single-photon emission computed tomography quantitation of gallium citrate uptake for the differentiation of lymphoma from benign hilar uptake

Einat Even-Sapir; Rachel Bar-Shalom; Ora Israel; Alex Frenkel; Galina Iosilevsky; Nissim Haim; Ron Epelbaum; Diana Gaitini; Gerald M. Kolodny; Dov Front

PURPOSE To assess the role of quantitative gallium citrate (Ga 67) single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in differentiating lymphoma from benign hilar uptake, concentrations of Ga 67 in 29 sites of documented lymphoma and in 75 benign lesions were compared. PATIENTS AND METHODS One hundred seven thoracic Ga 67 SPECT studies obtained in 101 consecutive lymphoma patients were reviewed. Fifty-nine studies detected Ga 67 uptake in the hilar and or mediastinal regions. Forty-eight studies showed no such abnormality. The concentration of Ga 67 in the thoracic lesions was measured using a quantitative SPECT technique and its nature was determined by correlation with computed tomographic (CT) scans and follow-up evaluation of the sites. RESULTS In 20 of 59 abnormal studies (34%), there was lymphoma in the hilar and or mediastinal regions. In the remaining 39 abnormal studies (66%), Ga 67 uptake was benign. There were 29 sites of lymphoma and 75 benign lesions. The concentration of Ga 67 in lymphoma was significantly higher than in benign hilar uptake (13.2 +/- 5.4 %ID/mL x 10(-3) v 5.6 +/- 1.5 % injected dose (ID)/mL x 10(-3); P < .001). A concentration value of 8.3 %ID/mL x 10(-3) was found to best separate lymphoma and benign uptake, with a sensitivity of 90%, a specificity of 93%, a positive predictive value of 84%, and a negative predictive value of 96%. CONCLUSION Lymphoma and benign hilar uptake differ significantly in their concentration of Ga 67. The present study shows that quantitative Ga-67 SPECT reliably differentiates lymphoma and benign uptake.


Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 2007

The Utility of Focused Assessment With Sonography for Trauma as a Triage Tool in Multiple-Casualty Incidents During the Second Lebanon War

Nira Beck-Razi; Doron Fischer; Moshe Michaelson; Ahuva Engel; Diana Gaitini

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the role of focused assessment with sonography for trauma (FAST) as a triage tool in multiple‐casualty incidents (MCIs) for a single international conflict.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1996

Utility of gallium-67 scintigraphy in low-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.

Simona Ben-Haim; Rachel Bar-Shalom; Ora Israel; Nissim Haim; Ron Epelbaum; Menachem Ben-Shachar; Diana Gaitini; Gerald M. Kolodny; Dov Front

PURPOSE Low-grade non-Hodgkins lymphoma (LGNHL) has traditionally been considered non-gallium-avid. The sensitivity of gallium 67 (67Ga) scintigraphy when using modern equipment and techniques in patients with LGNHL was investigated. MATERIALS AND METHODS Fifty-seven consecutive patients with LGNHL underwent 67Ga scintigraphy at initial presentation (n = 40), when tumor progression occurred during treatment (n = 3), and at suspected disease recurrence after continuous clinical remission (CCR) (n = 14). Planar and tomographic images were obtained with either a very large field-of-view or a dual-head digital camera. Of 45 patients with Ga-avid LGNHL, 30 underwent 93 follow-up scans (one to six studies per patient). Scan findings were correlated with clinical and computed tomographic (CT) findings and with patient outcomes. RESULTS 67Ga scintigraphy was positive in 45 of 57 patients (sensitivity, 79%) and in 113 of 164 disease sites (sensitivity, 69%). The sensitivity was higher in the more common types of LGNHL: follicular, predominantly small cleaved cell (FSC), and follicular, mixed small cleaved and large cell (FM) (84% and 91% in patients and 72% and 71% in disease sites, respectively). Sensitivity was lower in patients with mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma (MALT) and small lymphocytic lymphoma (SL). Among 28 patients with disease recurrence after CCR (14 with and 14 without baseline studies), 67Ga scan was positive in 25, for a sensitivity of 89% for detection of disease recurrence. CONCLUSION When modern technology is used, 67Ga scintigraphy has good sensitivity in patients with LGNHL. It therefore can be used to monitor response to therapy and to provide early detection of disease recurrence in these patients.


Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 2010

Role of Doppler Ultrasonography in the Triage of Acute Scrotum in the Emergency Department

Yael Yagil; Inna Naroditsky; Jumana Milhem; Ronit Leiba; Maxim Leiderman; Shadie Badaan; Diana Gaitini

Objective. The purpose of this study was to examine the triage role of scrotal Doppler ultrasonography (DUS) as the primary preoperative diagnostic tool in patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with acute scrotum. Methods. Patients who presented to the ED with acute scrotum and underwent scrotal DUS in the ultrasound unit over a 3‐year period (2004–2007) were included in the study. Patient characteristics, DUS findings, and clinical management were retrospectively collected and reviewed. Doppler ultrasonographic diagnoses were compared with histopathologic findings for patients who underwent exploration and with final diagnoses at the time of discharge for patients undergoing medical treatment. Results. A total of 620 consecutive patients with 669 DUS examinations were included. The most common scrotal DUS diagnoses were epididymitis, hydrocele, varicocele, and orchitis. Scrotal trauma was present in 77 cases. Hospitalization followed the initial ED evaluation for 155 patients; 68 underwent surgery. Testicular torsion was ultrasonographically suspected in 20 patients and confirmed in 18. Scrotal malignancy was incidentally diagnosed in 13 patients and testicular hematoma in 8. Doppler ultrasonography for the diagnosis of testicular torsion had 94% sensitivity, 96% specificity, 95.5% accuracy, an 89.4% positive predictive value (PPV), and a 98% negative predictive value (NPV). Doppler ultrasonography for the diagnosis of testicular malignancy had 92% sensitivity, 95% specificity, 94% accuracy, a 78.5% PPV, and a 98% NPV. Conclusions. Scrotal DUS is a highly sensitive preoperative diagnostic tool, thereby validating its routine use in the initial triage of patients with acute scrotum presenting to the ED.

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Ora Israel

Rambam Health Care Campus

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Rachel Bar-Shalom

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Ron Epelbaum

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Nissim Haim

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Ahuva Engel

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Michalle Soudack

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Nira Beck-Razi

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Zohar Keidar

Rambam Health Care Campus

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Eldad J. Dann

Rambam Health Care Campus

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