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Dive into the research topics where Doron Fischer is active.

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Featured researches published by Doron Fischer.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2007

Agile patency system eliminates risk of capsule retention in patients with known intestinal strictures who undergo capsule endoscopy.

Juan Manuel Herrerias; Jonathan A. Leighton; Guido Costamagna; Anthony Infantolino; Rami Eliakim; Doron Fischer; David T. Rubin; Howard D. Manten; Eitan Scapa; Douglas R. Morgan; Ari Bergwerk; B. Koslowsky; Samuel N. Adler

BACKGROUND Capsule endoscopy (CE) of the small bowel has become a standard diagnostic tool, but there have been concerns regarding the risk of capsule retention in certain high-risk groups. The Agile patency system, an ingestible and dissolvable capsule with an external scanner, was developed to allow physicians to perform CE with greater confidence that the capsule will be safely excreted in patients at risk for capsule retention. OBJECTIVE Our purpose was to assess the ability of the device to help physicians identify which patients with known strictures may safely undergo CE. DESIGN Patients with known strictures ingested the new patency capsule and underwent periodic scanning until it was excreted. The intestinal tract was considered to be sufficiently patent if the capsule was excreted intact or if the capsule was not detected by the scanner at 30 hours after ingestion. If patency was established, then standard CE was performed. SETTING International multicenter study. PATIENTS A total of 106 patients with known strictures. INTERVENTION Agile patency system. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS Performance and safety of Agile patency system. RESULTS A total of 106 patients ingested the patency capsule. Fifty-nine (56%) excreted it intact and subsequently underwent CE. There were no cases of capsule retention. Significant findings on CE were found in 24 (41%). There were 3 severe adverse events. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that the Agile patency system is a useful tool for physicians to use before CE in patients with strictures to avoid retention. This group of patients may have a high yield of clinically significant findings at CE. This capsule may determine whether patients who have a contraindication to CE may safely undergo CE and obtain useful diagnostic information.


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.


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 | 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 Ultrasound in Medicine | 2011

Color-Coded Duplex Sonography Compared to Multidetector Computed Tomography for the Diagnosis of Crohn Disease Relapse and Complications

Diana Gaitini; Adam J. Kreitenberg; Doron Fischer; Itay Maza; Yehuda Chowers

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of color‐coded duplex sonography for the diagnosis of Crohn disease relapse and complications compared to multidetector computed tomography (CT).


The American Journal of the Medical Sciences | 2006

Acute cytomegalovirus infection associated with the onset of inflammatory bowel disease

Khetam Hussein; Tony Hayek; Shadi Hamoud; Kamel Yassin; Doron Fischer; Eugene Vlodavsky; Zipora Kra-Oz

A 29-year-old man was admitted with high-grade fever, crampy abdominal pain, and watery diarrhea that had persisted for 2 weeks before his admission. Symptomatic treatment (acetaminophen only) was of no benefit. On physical examination, there was diffuse abdominal tenderness. Laboratory tests showed a leukomoid reaction with atypical lymphocytosis, and serology tests revealed acute cytomegalovirus infection. Abdominal computed tomography and colonoscopy revealed an inflammatory process involving the large intestine. On histologic examinations of intestinal biopsy samples, there was an active inflammation with no inclusion bodies. The patient was treated with ganciclovir with only mild improvement. Adding 5-aminosalicylic acid caused little further improvement. Repeated colonoscopy performed 2 months later showed severe chronic ulcerative colitis. Only the addition of systemic steroids caused complete resolution of the symptoms. On review of the literature (Medline search for cytomegalovirus colitis in immunocompetent patients), 18 cases were found. On follow-up, 10 of these patients were found to have inflammatory bowel disease.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2009

Pseudopancreatitis in Trauma Patients

Olga R. Brook; Doron Fischer; Daniela Militianu; Ayelet Eran; Ludmila Guralnik; Shlomi Israelit; Ahuva Engel

OBJECTIVE The purpose of our study was to review the significance of intra- and peripancreatic fluid in trauma patients who have no other signs of pancreatic injury. CONCLUSION We propose that intra- and peripancreatic fluid may be the consequence of hypovolemic shock treated with hyperhydration when there is significant delay between injury and imaging.


Computerized Medical Imaging and Graphics | 2008

Prospective study of digital radiographs versus conventional screen films in Small Bowel Follow-Through examination

Olga R. Brook; Doron Fischer; Diana Litmanovich; M. Leiderman; R. Molnar; Eduard Ghersin; Reuven Shreiber; A. Hirshenbaum; U. Kleinhaus; A. Rosenberger; Ahuva Engel

PURPOSE To prospectively compare subjective radiological quality, radiation dose and effect on workflow using digital radiography (DR) vs. conventional screen film (SF) radiography in the Small Bowel Follow-Through (SBFT) examination. METHODS Five attending and four resident radiologists compared hard-copy images from 11 SBFT examinations, for which every patient had a defined pair of SF and DR images taken 20-30 min apart. SF and DR were performed with equivalent exposure data. Overall image quality, intestinal mucosa definition and bone visualization were graded on a 5-point scale, with 5 being the highest value. Thus, 11 patients had three criteria judged by nine observers in two modalities for a total of 594 observations of image quality. The radiation doses and effect on workflow were also compared. Statistical analysis was performed with the Mann-Whitney U test. RESULTS The mean scores on DR and SF for overall image quality, intestinal mucosa definition and bone visualization were 4.49 vs. 3.17, 4.38 vs. 3.4, and 4.5 vs. 2.4, respectively (p<0.001 in all cases). The average radiation dose with DR was 0.93+/-0.54 cGy, and -1.58+/-0.63 cGy with SF (p=0.016), reflecting a 41% dose reduction. Production of a DR image by technicians took 3.5+/-1.3 min vs. 5.5+/-1.5 min for SF (p=0.002). CONCLUSION Subjective image quality of hard-copy digital radiographs of the small bowel through examination is superior to images obtained with conventional radiographs, with an associated reduction of 41% in radiation dose and increased efficiency.


European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 2003

Wireless capsule video endoscopy is a superior diagnostic tool in comparison to barium follow-through and computerized tomography in patients with suspected Crohn's disease.

Rami Eliakim; Doron Fischer; Alain Suissa; Kamal Yassin; Dalia Katz; Nurit Guttman; Michal Migdal


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2005

PET/CT Detection of Unexpected Gastrointestinal Foci of 18F-FDG Uptake: Incidence, Localization Patterns, and Clinical Significance

Ora Israel; Nikolay Yefremov; Rachel Bar-Shalom; Olga Kagana; Alex Frenkel; Zohar Keidar; Doron Fischer

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Ahuva Engel

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Diana Gaitini

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Olga R. Brook

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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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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Diana Litmanovich

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Nira Beck-Razi

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Amos Ofer

Rambam Health Care Campus

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