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Dive into the research topics where Glendon G. Cox is active.

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Featured researches published by Glendon G. Cox.


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 1996

Ultrasonic measurement of glomerular diameters in normal adult humans

Timothy J. Hall; Michael F. Insana; Linda A. Harrison; Glendon G. Cox

The average size of acoustic scatterers and the integrated backscatter coefficient of kidney cortex were measured in vivo from 2-4 MHz for a group of 50 normal adult volunteers. Our goal was to determine the sensitivity of the ultrasonic measurements under clinical conditions by identifying biologic sources of estimation uncertainty. Based on 10 measurements on each kidney of each volunteer, the average glomerular diameter for the group was found to be 216 +/- 27 microns (SD). Glomerular size was found to correlate with body surface area (r = 0.4), and the ratio of glomerular surface area to body surface area (GSA/BSA) was found to be constant throughout normal adult life with GSA/BSA = (8.24 +/- 1.35) x 10(-8) (SD). These results are consistent with histologic analyses found in the literature. Within an individual, 7% standard errors in GSA/BSA are typical. Biologic variability dominates the variance in scatterer size estimates in a group not matched for BSA, where it accounts for 47% of the variance. In a group of individuals matched for BSA, biologic variability accounts for only 21% of the variance; day-to-day variability accounts for 35% of the variance; and experimental parameters account for the remainder. If a deviation greater than 2 x SD is considered abnormal, then this technique can potentially detect changes in glomerular diameter as small as 30 microns within an individual. To detect abnormal GSA/BSA values for an individual, GSA/BSA would have to differ from the mean for that group by about 3.6 x 10(-8) or about 40%. Therefore, at this time scatterer size estimates appear most reliable for tracking the progression of disease and treatment for an individual over time.


The Journal of Urology | 1984

Renal cell carcinoma--angioinfarction.

Winston K. Mebust; John W. Weigel; Kyo Rak Lee; Glendon G. Cox; William R. Jewell; Engikolai C. Krishnan

In our experience the mortality rate in 46 patients who underwent angioinfarction for renal cell carcinoma was 4 per cent. Fever, ileus and leukocytosis were noted in 86 to 90 per cent of our patients. The use of absolute ethanol as a medium for renal infarction was associated with a significant incidence of damage to other organs. A 30 per cent decrease in tumor volume following angioinfarction using absorbable gelatin sponge and Gianturco coils was noted in 75 per cent of the patients. There was no evidence of metastatic tumor reduction and we could not document any significant decrease in operative time or blood loss. It would appear that there is some increased survival rate in patients with metastasis who are given adjuvant immune ribonucleic acid therapy. However, the numbers in our series are not significant to draw any definite conclusion. It is apparent that patients treated with infarction, delayed nephrectomy and medroxyprogesterone acetate did not have any significant survival over those treated with palliative nephrectomy or chemotherapy. The macrophage maturation assay may be useful during clinical followup.


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 1995

Effects of endothelin-1 on renal microvasculature measured using quantitative ultrasound.

Michael F. Insana; John G. Wood; Timothy J. Hall; Glendon G. Cox; Linda A. Harrison

Renal vascular resistance is an important feature of kidney function and disease. To maintain adequate blood flow, renal vascular resistance varies in response to changes in systemic pressure. Vascular resistance is largely determined by arteriolar diameter, which is regulated by local and systemic factors. We used quantitative ultrasound techniques to follow renal vascular changes in anesthetized dogs during local intraarterial infusion of a potent vasoconstrictor, endothelin-1 (ET-1). Average arteriolar diameters were estimated by analyzing echo-signal spectra (5-15 MHz) obtained from renal cortex in vivo before, during, and after ET-1 infusion. At calculated arterial concentrations of 0.01 nM, 0.1 nM, and 1.0 nM, ET-1 reduced the average arteriolar diameter of 38 +/- 2 microns by 2%, 63%, and 91%, respectively, without producing a significant change in systemic blood pressure. Changes in scatterer size were consistent with the observed changes in renal hemodynamics detected using Doppler techniques. In addition, acoustic attenuation was found to increase with ET-1 concentration. These data suggest that quantitative ultrasound methods are sensitive to changes in renal arteriolar diameter, and may be a new noninvasive method for continuously monitoring changes in vascular resistance.


Medical Physics | 1994

Comparison of the low-contrast detectability of a screen-film system and third generation computed radiography.

Larry T. Cook; Michael F. Insana; Michael A. McFadden; Timothy J. Hall; Glendon G. Cox

Contrast-detail (CD) analysis was used to compare the low-contrast detectability of computed radiography (CR) and screen-film (SF) as applied to the task of adult chest radiography. A phantom was constructed and imaged using the same exposure factors throughout all experiments. Within-observer variance, between-observer variance, and image sample variance were calculated and used to estimate the standard error for each experiment. The results of these CD experiments agreed with the predictions of the Rose model. Observers performed equally well for low-contrast target detection using CR and SF.


Medical Physics | 1996

The effects of lossy compression on the detection of subtle pulmonary nodules.

Glendon G. Cox; Larry T. Cook; Michael F. Insana; Michael A. McFadden; Timothy J. Hall; Linda A. Harrison; Donald A. Eckard; Norman L. Martin

We examined the ability of radiologists to detect pulmonary nodules in computed radiographic (CR) chest images subjected to lossy image compression. Low-contrast 1-cm diameter targets simulating noncalcified pulmonary nodules were introduced into clinical images and presented to ten radiologists in a series of two-alternative forced-choice (2AFC) observer experiments. The percentages of correct observer responses obtained while viewing noncompressed images (1:1) were compared with those obtained for the same images compressed 7:1, 16:1, 44:1, and 127:1. The images were compressed using a standard full-frame discrete cosine transform (DCT) technique. The degree of compression was determined by quantizing Fourier components in various frequency channels and then Huffman encoding the result. The data show a measurable decline in performance for each compression ratio. Through signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) analysis, we found that the reduction in performance was due primarily to the compression algorithm that increased image noise in the frequency channels of the signals to be detected.


American Journal of Surgery | 1991

Role of Herniography in the Diagnosis of Occult Hernias

Norman C. Estes; Ed W. Childs; Glendon G. Cox; James H. Thomas

Twenty-two patients with groin or incisional pain and normal physical examinations underwent herniography. Eight patients were found to have 11 unsuspected hernias. Seven were direct, two indirect, and two incisional. Six of nine groin hernias were recurrent. Exploration confirmed the herniographic findings in all patients. Follow-up evaluation of patients undergoing herniorrhaphy revealed resolution of symptoms. Ten of the 14 patients with normal herniograms were asymptomatic 3 months after herniography. In these 22 patients, herniography resulted in a savings of


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1989

Gastric mucosal nodules due to cytomegalovirus infection

Larry D. Shuster; Glendon G. Cox; Paramjit Bhatia; Philip B. Miner

31,000. We conclude that herniography is cost-effective and useful in patients with abdominal wall pain of obscure etiology.


Medical Physics | 1995

Contrast‐detail analysis of image degradation due to lossy compression

Larry T. Cook; Michael F. Insana; Michael A. McFadden; Timothy J. Hall; Glendon G. Cox

SummaryWe report a patient who developed cytomegalovirus infection after receiving a heart transplant. Nodular gastric lesions were noted on radiologic and endoscopic examinations. Endoscopic biopsy provided early evidence of cytomegalovirus infection.


Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 1991

Mn[III] uroporphyrin I: A novel metalloporphyrin contrast agent for magnetic resonance imaging

John H. McMillan; Glendon G. Cox; Bruce F. Kimler; Jay Spicer; Solomon Batnitzky

A contrast-detail (CD) experiment was performed to study the effect of lossy compression on computed radiographic (CR) images. Digital CR images of a phantom were compressed by quantizing the full-frame discrete cosine transform and Huffman encoding the result. Since low-contrast detectability is directly linked to an important radiological task, namely, the detection of noncalcified pulmonary nodules in adult chest radiographs, the goal of the study was to quantify any loss in low-contrast detectability due to compression. Compression ratios varied significantly among compressed images, despite the use of fixed compression parameters; detectability could be specified by a single parameter of a CD curve; there was no significant reduction in detectability for an average compression ratio of 11:1; and, there was a statistically significant degradation in detectability for an average compression ratio of 125:1.


Journal of Digital Imaging | 1990

Experience in the use of an image-processing workstation for a photostimulable phosphor radiographic system

Mark D. Murphey; John M. Bramble; Glendon G. Cox; John H. McMillan; Samuel J. Dwyer; Patrick C. Harvey

We have used an intracranial 9L rat brain tumor model to determine whether a novel metalloporphyrin, Mn[III] uroporphyrin I (MnUROP-I), could function as an intravenous MRI contrast agent for brain tumors. In several experiments, 24 male Fischer 344 rats were inoculated intracranially with 9L brain tumor cells. On day 15 postinoculation, animals were anesthetized and the femoral vein exposed. Prior to the intravenous injection of the contrast agent, a precontrast scan (1 Tesla in a standard head coil) was performed. Thirty min after injection of the contrast agent, a postcontrast scan was performed. Although there was only a suggestion of abnormality on the precontrast scans, the presence of tumor was visibility enhanced in the postcontrast scans. In 3 animals scanned at 24 hr postinjection, persistent tumor enhancement was demonstrated. Measured tumor sizes on the MRI scans were consistent with sizes measured at autopsy and histologically. These results demonstrate that MnUROP-I is an effective MRI contrast agent for the detection of an intracranial brain tumor in the rat model.

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Timothy J. Hall

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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