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Dive into the research topics where James O'Donnell is active.

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Featured researches published by James O'Donnell.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2015

Image quality and diagnostic performance of a digital PET prototype in patients with oncologic diseases: Initial experience and comparison with analog PET

Nghi Nguyen; Jose Vercher-Conejero; Abdus Sattar; Michael Miller; Piotr Maniawski; David W. Jordan; Raymond F. Muzic; Kuan Hao Su; James O'Donnell; Peter Faulhaber

We report our initial clinical experience for image quality and diagnostic performance of a digital PET prototype scanner with time-of-flight (DigitalTF), compared with an analog PET scanner with time-of-flight (GeminiTF PET/CT). Methods: Twenty-one oncologic patients, mean age 58 y, first underwent clinical 18F-FDG PET/CT on the GeminiTF. The scanner table was then withdrawn while the patient remained on the table, and the DigitalTF was inserted between the GeminiTF PET and CT scanner. The patients were scanned for a second time using the same PET field of view with CT from the GeminiTF for attenuation correction. Two interpreters reviewed the 2 sets of PET/CT images for overall image quality, lesion conspicuity, and sharpness. They counted the number of suggestive 18F-FDG–avid lesions and provided the TNM staging for the 5 patients referred for initial staging. Standardized uptake values (SUVs) and SUV gradients as a measure of lesion sharpness were obtained. Results: The DigitalTF showed better image quality than the GeminiTF. In a side-by-side comparison using a 5-point scale, lesion conspicuity (4.3 ± 0.6), lesion sharpness (4.3 ± 0.6), and diagnostic confidence (3.4 ± 0.7) were better with DigitalTF than with GeminiTF (P < 0.01). In 52 representative lesions, the lesion maximum SUV was 36% higher with DigitalTF than with GeminiTF, lesion–to–blood-pool SUV ratio was 59% higher, and SUV gradient was 51% higher, with good correlation between the 2 scanners. Lesions less than 1.5 cm showed a greater increase in SUV from GeminiTF to DigitalTF than those lesions 1.5 cm or greater. In 5 of 21 patients, DigitalTF showed an additional 8 suggestive lesions that were not seen using GeminiTF. In the 15 restaging patients, the true-negative rate was 100% and true-positive rate was 78% for both scanners. In the 5 patients for initial staging, DigitalTF led to upstaging in 2 patients and showed the same staging in the other 3 patients, compared with GeminiTF. Conclusion: DigitalTF provides better image quality, diagnostic confidence, and accuracy than GeminiTF. DigitalTF may be the most beneficial in detecting small tumor lesions and disease staging.


Blood Reviews | 2016

FDG-PET imaging in hematological malignancies

L. Valls; C. Badve; S. Avril; K. Herrmann; Peter Faulhaber; James O'Donnell; Norbert Avril

The majority of aggressive lymphomas is characterized by an up regulated glycolytic activity, which enables the visualization by F-18 FDG-PET/CT. One-stop hybrid FDG-PET/CT combines the functional and morphologic information, outperforming both, CT and FDG-PET as separate imaging modalities. This has resulted in several recommendations using FDG-PET/CT for staging, restaging, monitoring during therapy, and assessment of treatment response as well as identification of malignant transformation. FDG-PET/CT may obviate the need for a bone marrow biopsy in patients with Hodgkins lymphoma and diffuse large B cell lymphoma. FDG-PET/CT response assessment is recommended for FDG-avid lymphomas, whereas CT-based response evaluation remains important in lymphomas with low or variable FDG avidity. The treatment induced change in metabolic activity allows for assessment of response after completion of therapy as well as prediction of outcome early during therapy. The five-point scale Deauville Criteria allows the assessment of treatment response based on visual FDG-PET analysis. Although the use of FDG-PET/CT for prediction of therapeutic response is promising it should only be conducted in the context of clinical trials. Surveillance FDG-PET/CT after complete remission is discouraged due to the relative high number of false-positive findings, which in turn may result in further unnecessary investigations. Future directions include the use of new PET tracers such as F-18 fluorothymidine (FLT), a surrogate biomarker of cellular proliferation and Ga-68 CXCR4, a chemokine receptor imaging biomarker as well as innovative digital PET/CT and PET/MRI techniques.


Pediatric Radiology | 2003

Skeletal scintigraphic appearance of an auto-transplanted osteoarticular plug: epiphyseal transplant

Stuart C. Morrison; John T. Makley; James O'Donnell

Nuclear medicine bone scan is an essential diagnostic imaging tool both for the diagnosis and staging of bone tumors and in the follow-up of these patients. It is very important that we be able to discriminate between normal variants, changes related to altered physical stress, and recurrent disease in order to interpret the bone scan meaningfully. We wish to report the appearance of the isotope bone scan, technetium 99m-labeled methylene diphosphonate (99mTc-MDP), associated with an auto-transplanted osteoarticular plug (epiphyseal transplant) performed following limb amputation. This reconstructive surgery can give a potentially misleading appearance on the nuclear medicine bone scan if one is unfamiliar with this surgical technique.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 1998

Malrotation demonstrated on gastric emptying study.

Stuart C. Morrison; James O'Donnell

Gastric emptying study was performed following demonstration of gastroesophageal reflux in a child with persistent vomiting. The dynamic study was performed with liquid formula labeled with Tc-99m sulfur colloid. Images are shown at 30 minutes and 60 minutes and clearly demonstrate all of the small bowel to the right of midline. Subsequent upper GI barium study confirmed the diagnosis of malrotation. The upper GI series remains the gold standard for the diagnosis of malrotation, but this diagnosis can be suggested from other studies including ultrasound and, more rarely, as described in this case, gastric emptying studies.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 1985

Clinical Evaluation of 360° and 180° Data Sampling Techniques for Transaxial SPECT Thallium-201 Myocardial Perfusion Imaging

Raymundo T. Go; William J. MacIntyre; Thomas S. Houser; Mauricio Pantoja; James O'Donnell; David H. Feiglin; Bruno Sufka; Donald A. Underwood; Thomas F. Meaney


Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology | 1997

Technical Improvements in Fluorine-18-FDG PET Imaging of the Abdomen and Pelvis

Gregory P. Leisure; Hubert Vesselle; Peter Faulhaber; James O'Donnell; Lee P. Adler; Floro Miraldi


American Surgeon | 1997

Cholescintigraphy in the diagnosis of bile leak after laparoscopic cholecystectomy.

Bernardo A. Sandoval; Claudia E. Goettler; Ann V. Robinson; James O'Donnell; Lee P. Adler; Thomas A. Stellato


Society of Nuclear Medicine Annual Meeting Abstracts | 2013

Contribution of the modeling of point spread function and time-of-flight technology on the image quality of a PET/CT system

Jose Vercher-Conejero; Andrew Sher; Jeffrey A. Kolthammer; Andres Kohan; Christian Rubbert; Patrick Wojtylak; Sasan Partovi; Maria Gaeta; James O'Donnell


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2014

Initial experiences in PET/MRI for imaging dementia

Patrick Wojtylak; Peter Faulhaber; James O'Donnell


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2014

Initial clinical experience in digital PET/CT

Patrick Wojtylak; Norbert Avril; James O'Donnell; Peter Faulhaber

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Peter Faulhaber

Case Western Reserve University

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Patrick Wojtylak

University Hospitals of Cleveland

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David H. Feiglin

State University of New York Upstate Medical University

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Jose Vercher-Conejero

Case Western Reserve University

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Andrew Sher

Case Western Reserve University

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Andres Kohan

Case Western Reserve University

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Christian Rubbert

Case Western Reserve University

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