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Dive into the research topics where Joel F. Platt is active.

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Featured researches published by Joel F. Platt.


Radiographics | 2009

Imaging of the Placenta: A Multimodality Pictorial Review

Khaled M. Elsayes; Andrew T. Trout; Aaron M. Friedkin; Peter S. Liu; Ronald O. Bude; Joel F. Platt; Christine O. Menias

The placenta is often overlooked in the routine evaluation of a normal gestation, receiving attention only when an abnormality is detected. Although uncommon, abnormalities of the placenta are important to recognize owing to the potential for maternal and fetal morbidity and mortality. Pathologic conditions of the placenta include placental causes of hemorrhage, gestational trophoblastic disease, retained products of conception, nontrophoblastic placental tumors, metastases, and cystic lesions. Sonography remains the imaging modality of choice for evaluation of the placenta. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging can be of added diagnostic value when further characterization is required, particularly in the setting of invasive placental processes such as placenta accreta and gestational trophoblastic disease. Computed tomography (CT) has a limited role in the evaluation of placental disease owing to limited tissue characterization, compared with that of MR imaging, and the radiation risk to the fetus; this risk often outweighs the benefit. The primary role for CT is in the evaluation of trauma and gestational trophoblastic disease, for which it allows characterization of the primary lesion and distant metastases.


Radiographics | 2012

Dual-Energy CT with Single- and Dual-Source Scanners: Current Applications in Evaluating the Genitourinary Tract

Ravi K. Kaza; Joel F. Platt; Richard H. Cohan; Elaine M. Caoili; Mahmoud M. Al-Hawary; Ashish P. Wasnik

Several promising clinical applications for dual-energy computed tomography (CT) in genitourinary imaging have been reported. Dual-energy CT not only provides excellent morphologic detail but also can supply material-specific and quantitative information that may be particularly useful in genitourinary imaging. Dual-energy CT has unique capabilities for characterizing renal lesions by quantifying iodine content and helping identify the mineral contents of renal stones, information that is important for patient care. Virtual unenhanced images reconstructed from dual-energy CT datasets can be useful for detecting calculi within the iodine-filled urinary collecting system, potentially reducing the need for an unenhanced scanning phase at CT urography. Although the underlying principles of dual-energy CT are the same regardless of scanner type, single-source dual-energy scanners with fast kilovoltage switching differ from dual-source dual-energy scanners both in image data acquisition and in processing methods; an understanding of these differences may help optimize dual-energy CT genitourinary protocols. Dual-energy CT performed with a dual-source scanner or with a single-source scanner with fast kilovoltage switching also has some important limitations. Further advances in scanning protocols and refinement of processing techniques to reduce image noise may lead to more widespread use of dual-energy CT.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2012

Computed tomography enterography findings correlate with tissue inflammation, not fibrosis in resected small bowel Crohn's disease

Jeremy Adler; Darashana Punglia; Jonathan R. Dillman; Alexandros D. Polydorides; Maneesh Dave; Mahmoud M. Al-Hawary; Joel F. Platt; Barbara J. McKenna; Ellen M. Zimmermann

Background: It has become commonplace to categorize small intestinal Crohns disease (CD) as “active” vs. “inactive” or “inflammatory” vs. “fibrotic” based on computed tomography enterography (CTE) findings. Data on histologic correlates of CTE findings are lacking. We aimed to compare CTE findings with histology from surgically resected specimens. We tested the hypothesis that CTE findings can distinguish tissue inflammation from fibrosis. Methods: Patients who underwent CTE within 3 months before intestinal resection for CD were retrospectively studied. Radiologists blinded to history and histology scored findings on CTE. Pathologists blinded to history and imaging scored resected histology. We compared histology with CTE findings and radiologists assessment of whether the stricture was likely “active” or “inactive.” Results: In all, 22 patients met inclusion criteria. Inflammatory CTE findings correlated with histologic inflammation (rho = 0.52). Strictures believed to be “active” on CTE were more inflamed at histology (P = 0.0002). Strictures lacking inflammatory findings on CTE or considered “inactive” were not associated with greater histologic fibrosis or significant histologic inflammation. Upstream dilation was associated with greater tissue fibrosis in univariate (P = 0.014) but not in multivariate analysis (P = 0.53). Overall, histologic fibrosis correlated best with histologic inflammation (rho = 0.52). Strictures on CTE with the most active disease activity also had the most fibrosis on histology. Conclusions: CTE findings of mesenteric hypervascularity, mucosal hyperenhancement, and mesenteric fat stranding predict tissue inflammation. However, small bowel stricture without CTE findings of inflammation does not predict the presence of tissue fibrosis. Therefore, caution should be used when using CTE criteria to predict the presence of scar tissue. (Inflamm Bowel Dis 2011;)


Radiographics | 2010

CT Enterography: Principles, Trends, and Interpretation of Findings

Khaled M. Elsayes; Mahmoud M. Al-Hawary; Jagalpathy Jagdish; Halemane Ganesh; Joel F. Platt

Computed tomographic (CT) enterography is an emerging alternative to traditional fluoroscopy for the assessment of disorders of the small bowel. The greatly improved spatial and temporal resolution provided by multidetector CT scanners, combined with good luminal distention provided by negative oral contrast agents and with good bowel wall visualization, have made CT enterography the main imaging modality not only for investigating proved or suspected inflammatory bowel disease but also for detecting occult gastrointestinal tract bleeding, small bowel neoplasms, and mesenteric ischemia. CT enterography is particularly useful for differentiating between active and fibrotic bowel strictures in patients with Crohn disease, thus enabling selection of the most appropriate treatment (medical management or intervention) for an improved outcome. CT enterography allows excellent visualization of the entire thickness of the bowel wall and depicts extraenteric involvement as well, providing more detailed and comprehensive information about the extent and severity of the disease process.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2011

Distinguishing enhancing from nonenhancing renal lesions with fast kilovoltage-switching dual-energy CT

Ravi K. Kaza; Elaine M. Caoili; Richard H. Cohan; Joel F. Platt

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this article is to evaluate the accuracy of dual-energy CT in distinguishing enhancing from nonenhancing or equivocally enhancing renal lesions. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively reviewed fast kilovoltage-switching dual-energy renal mass CT performed in 39 patients. On the contrast-enhanced dual-energy CT scans, renal lesions were graded subjectively for enhancement using iodine density images and iodine overlay images. Lesion iodine density was measured to identify an optimal threshold for detection of enhancement. Lesion attenuation measurements on unenhanced and contrast-enhanced scans were performed to identify enhancing (increase of > 20 HU) lesions, which were used as the reference standard. Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy for detection of enhancement were calculated for the different dual-energy CT techniques. RESULTS Eighty-three renal lesions were evaluated. On the basis of attenuation measurements, there were 20 enhancing and 63 nonenhancing lesions. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy for the detection of enhancement according to the lesion appearance were 70%, 98.4%, and 91.6%, respectively, on iodine density images and were 85%, 90.5%, and 89.2%, respectively, on iodine overlay images generated from contrast-enhanced dual-energy CT scans. Of the various thresholds of measured lesion iodine density (1-3 mg/cm(3)), a threshold of 2 mg/cm(3) showed the highest accuracy for the detection of enhancement, with sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of 90%, 93.7%, and 92.8%, respectively. CONCLUSION Fast kilovoltage-switching dual-energy CT is highly specific in excluding enhancement and moderately to highly sensitive in detecting enhancement of renal lesions. Of the available dual-energy CT techniques, iodine density measurement using a threshold of 2 mg/cm(3) is most accurate in distinguishing enhancing from nonenhancing renal lesions.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2012

CT Enterography at 80 kVp With Adaptive Statistical Iterative Reconstruction Versus at 120 kVp With Standard Reconstruction: Image Quality, Diagnostic Adequacy, and Dose Reduction

Ravi K. Kaza; Joel F. Platt; Mahmoud M. Al-Hawary; Ashish P. Wasnik; Peter S. Liu; Amit Pandya

OBJECTIVE The objective of our study was to evaluate the image quality and diagnostic adequacy of the following two CT enterography protocols in patients weighing less than 160 lb (72 kg): 80-kVp imaging with the adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction (ASIR) in comparison with 120-kVp imaging with the filtered back projection reconstruction. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively reviewed 133 CT enterography examinations of 127 patients weighing less than 160 lb, 64 80-kVp examinations, and 69 120-kVp examinations. Image quality for evaluation of the bowel wall, mesenteric vessels, and hepatic parenchyma and the overall image quality were graded on a scale of 1-5 (1 = poor, 2 = acceptable, 3 = good, 4 = very good, 5 = excellent). Diagnostic accuracy for the detection of inflammatory bowel disease was evaluated. The volume CT dose index (CTDI(vol)) was recorded and effective dose was calculated from scanner-generated dose-length product. RESULTS There was a statistically significant decrease in the mean image quality scores for 80-kVp examinations compared with 120-kVp examinations for evaluation of the bowel wall (3.19 vs 3.70, respectively) and liver (3.12 vs 3.81) and for overall image quality (3.23 vs 3.68), but there was no significant decrease in score for evaluation of the mesenteric vessels (3.63 vs 3.67). None of the 80-kVp examinations was graded as poor, and all were considered to be of acceptable quality. Both techniques had comparable diagnostic accuracy for the detection of inflammatory bowel disease. Interobserver agreement was fair to moderate for qualitative image grading and was substantial for the detection of features of inflammatory bowel disease. The mean CTDI(vol) and effective dose for the 80-kVp examinations were 6.15 mGy and 4.60 mSv, respectively, and for the 120-kVp examinations, 20.79 mGy and 15.81 mSv. CONCLUSION In patients weighing less than 160 lb, CT enterography examinations at 80 kVp with 30% ASIR produce diagnostically acceptable image quality with an average CTDI(vol) of 6.15 mGy and an average effective dose of 4.60 mSv.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2008

Vascular Malformation and Hemangiomatosis Syndromes: Spectrum of Imaging Manifestations

Khaled M. Elsayes; Christine O. Menias; Jonathan R. Dillman; Joel F. Platt; Jonathon Willatt; Jay P. Heiken

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this review is to describe the role of imaging and associated findings in the diagnosis of blue rubber bleb nevus syndrome, Proteus syndrome, Klippel-Trénaunay syndrome, and Kasabach-Merritt syndrome. CONCLUSION Blue rubber bleb nevus, Proteus, Klippel-Trénaunay, and Kasabach-Merritt syndromes are a diverse group of vascular malformation and hemangiomatosis syndromes. Both cutaneous and visceral vascular lesions are associated with these disorders. Accurate diagnosis of these syndromes is important because they can be associated with serious complications, including life-threatening hemorrhage.


Radiology | 2011

Sonographic Twinkling Artifact for Renal Calculus Detection: Correlation with CT

Jonathan R. Dillman; Mariam Kappil; William J. Weadock; Jonathan M. Rubin; Joel F. Platt; Michael A. DiPietro; Ronald O. Bude

PURPOSE To retrospectively correlate sonographic color Doppler twinkling artifact within the kidneys with unenhanced computed tomography (CT) in the detection of nephrolithiasis. MATERIALS AND METHODS Institutional review board approval was obtained for this retrospective HIPAA-complaint investigation, and the informed consent requirement was waived. Sonographic imaging reports describing the presence of renal twinkling artifact between January 2008 and September 2009 were identified. Subjects who did not undergo unenhanced abdominal CT within 2 weeks after sonography were excluded. Ultrasound examinations were reviewed by three radiologists working together, and presence, number, location, and size of renal twinkling artifacts were documented by consensus opinion. Sonographic findings were correlated with unenhanced CT (5-mm section width, no overlap) for nephrolithiasis and other causes of twinkling artifact. The number, location, and size of renal calculi at CT were documented. RESULTS The presence of sonographic renal twinkling artifact, in general, had a 78% (95% confidence interval: 0.66, 0.90) positive predictive value for nephrolithiasis anywhere in the kidneys at CT. The true-positive rate of twinkling artifact for confirmed calculi at CT was 49% (73 of 148 twinkling foci), while the false-positive rate was 51% (75 of 148 twinkling foci). The overall sensitivity of twinkling artifact for the detection of specific individual renal calculi observed at CT was 55% (95% confidence interval: 0.47, 0.64). CONCLUSION While renal twinkling artifact is commonly associated with nephrolithiasis, this finding is relatively insensitive in routine clinical practice and has a high false-positive rate when 5-mm unenhanced CT images are used as the reference standard. SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL http://radiology.rsna.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1148/radiol.11102128/-/DC1.


Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2003

Aortic Intimal Tears: Detection with Spiral Computed Tomography

Leslie E. Quint; Joel F. Platt; Seema S. Sonnad; G. Michael Deeb; David M. Williams

PURPOSE To determine the frequency, locations, and sizes of aortic intimal tears detected using spiral computed tomography (CT). METHODS CT scans (26 single detector and 26 multidetector studies) from 52 patients with an unoperated aortic dissection and a patent false lumen were evaluated on a workstation. The number, location, and size of aortic tears were recorded and compared between the following groups: acute and chronic dissection, type A and type B, and single detector and multidetector studies. RESULTS In 52 patients, 129 tears were identified (mean 2.48 per patient, median 2, range 1-7). There were no significant differences in the number or size of tears between the acute and chronic, the type A and type B, or the single detector and multidetector groups (p>0.05). The most common locations for tears were the descending aorta (57, 44%) and the juxtarenal region (26, 20%). Within the type B category, there was no significant difference in tear locations between the acute and chronic groups (p>0.05). The majority of tears (88, 68%) were < or =1 cm in each dimension. Tears in the thoracic aorta were significantly larger than abdominal aortic tears (p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS All patients with an aortic dissection and a patent false lumen demonstrated one or more aortic intimal tears using spiral CT. Although most tears were small (</=1 cm), they were usually easily visualized.


Seminars in Ultrasound Ct and Mri | 1997

Doppler ultrasound of the kidney

Joel F. Platt

Conventional ultrasound of the kidney is used commonly to depict structural abnormalities. It is limited, however, by a lack of functional and vascular information. Doppler sonography can reduce this limitation of standard sonography quickly and noninvasively. Doppler examinations, although not difficult, must be done property to obtain useful data. Information regarding the presence and direction of flow in renal vessels can be obtained. Vascular stenosis can be identified by several Doppler criteria, although the role of Doppler as a screening measure remains controversial. Assessment of vascular resistance is possible from Doppler waveform analysis, using parameters such as the resistive index. These data may provide hemodynamic and predictive information regarding a dilated collecting system identified by conventional ultrasound. Analysis of the resistive index also may provide helpful clinical information in nonobstructive renal disease. In certain clinical settings, such analysis provides diagnostic data not readily available with other clinical and laboratory assessment methods. Pharmacologically stimulated renal Doppler examinations may lead to even greater benefits in the future. This article reviews renal Doppler ultrasound, including the physiological basis for Doppler examination, the technical principles of renal Doppler sonography, and the clinical applications of Doppler findings.

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Khaled M. Elsayes

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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