Laszlo J. Molnar
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Laszlo J. Molnar.
Pediatric Radiology | 2001
Andrea Doria; Maria Helena B. Kiss; Ana Paola N. Lotito; Laszlo J. Molnar; Cláudio Campi de Castro; Caio C. Medeiros; Giovanni Guido Cerri
Abstract.Background. Contrast-enhanced color Doppler ultrasonography is a non-radiation-bearing tool that can be of value for assessment of inflammatory and vascular synovial changes in juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA). Objectives. To evaluate the effect of contrast-enhanced color Doppler ultrasound (US) in the evaluation of synovial changes in the knees of children with JRA. Materials and methods. Sagittal color Doppler sonograms of 31 knees in 22 patients with JRA and of 10 knees in 5 control subjects were obtained before (at baseline) and after (at peak contrast phase) intravenous injection of SHU 508. Images were assessed for overall mean pixel intensity within the synovial tissue and for peak enhancement ratios {[(mean pixel intensity values at maximum contrast enhancement–unenhanced mean pixel intensity values)/unenhanced mean pixel intensity values] × 100}. The joints were classified into three groups by clinical/laboratory criteria: group A (active disease in the knee), n = 9; group B (quiescent disease with serum chemistry levels of active disease), n = 12 and group C (remission disease), n = 10. Results. Mean color pixel intensity values were markedly increased by the use of US contrast agents in groups A (P = 0.004) and B (P = 0.0001), did not reach statistical significance in group C (P = 0.06) and remained essentially unchanged in the control group (P = 0.25). Enhancement ratios for the three groups of JRA patients were not different (P = 0.38) (mean ± SD, 720 % ± 402 for group A, 731 % ± 703 for group B and 314 % ± 263 for group C). Conclusion. Contrast-enhanced color Doppler imaging holds promise for the detection of active synovial inflammatory disease in subclinical cases of JRA, thereby allowing earlier treatment and improved clinical outcome.
Journal of Clinical Ultrasound | 1998
Joseph Elias Benabou; Laszlo J. Molnar; Giovanni Guido Cerri
We used duplex sonography in patients with recurrent varicose veins after surgical treatment to detect any residual stump of the great saphenous vein at the sapheno‐femoral venous junction, and we compared these sonographic findings with surgical findings as the “gold standard.”
Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 2002
Andrea Doria; Roberto Guarniero; Rui Maciel de Godoy; Carlos Alberto Buchpiguel; Marcelo Modena; Fabiano G. Cunha; Carlos Augusto Malheiros Luzo; Laszlo J. Molnar; Marcelo Tatit Sapienza; Giovanni Guido Cerri
The authors evaluated the usefulness of an ultrasound contrast agent (SHU 508A) to help identify different scintigraphic phases of revascularization of the femoral head in children with Legg-Calvé-Perthes (LCP) disease. Eighteen unenhanced and contrast-enhanced power Doppler images and scintigrams of the pathologic hip in 18 children with LCP disease were compared. The scintigraphic stages of Conways classification for LCP disease (stage A, recanalization; stage B, neovascularization) were compared with the degree of vascularity and mean peak enhancement ratios obtained from analysis of Doppler sonograms. Qualitatively, the patients age (≤ or >7 years old) at the time of examination had a significant effect on the degree of vascularity visualized on postcontrast ultrasound images according to the scintigraphic stages. Quantitatively, there were no differences for overall mean peak enhancement ratios between stages A and B. Power Doppler ultrasound increased visualization of Doppler signals significantly but did not help in differentiating scintigraphic phases.
Pediatric Radiology | 2000
Alessandro Doria; Roberto Guarniero; Laszlo J. Molnar; Marcelo Modena; Fabiano G. Cunha; R. M. de Godoy; Giovanni Guido Cerri
Background. The revascularization process of the femoral head in Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease has not been well studied on Doppler images. We incorporated two relatively new developments in ultrasound: 3D power Doppler imaging combined with the use of contrast agents.¶Patients and methods. We studied two children with unilateral Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease through anterior-sagittal approaches with pre- and post-contrast power Doppler images, acquired in 2D and 3D planes.¶Results. In one patient, intraosseous vessels were detected only in the pathological femoral head both pre- and post-contrast administration. In the other, no flow was identifiable without the use of contrasts.¶Conclusion. The use of ultrasound contrast agents combined with 3D imaging modalities offers new alternative methods for visualization of intraosseous vascularity.
Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 2001
Laszlo J. Molnar; José Guilherme Mendes Pereira Caldas; Rodrigo Gobbo Garcia; Giovanni Guido Cerri
The aims of this study were to establish Doppler criteria for identifying direct carotid-cavernous fistulae (DCCF), as well as the level of agreement between results obtained by Doppler mapping vs. angiography. Doppler mapping and angiography were used to assess the direction of flow in the superior ophthalmic veins and the resistivity index in the internal carotid arteries of 30 patients with DCCF. Both methods independently demonstrated reverse flow in superior ophthalmic vein ipsilateral to the DCCF in 22 patients and normal flow in another four. The mean resistivity index for internal carotid arteries with ipsilateral DCCF was significantly reduced (p = 0.0001) compared with that for contralateral internal carotid arteries without DCCF. A resistivity index value of 0.495 offered a sensitivity and specificity of 86.6% in diagnosing ipsilateral DCCF. These findings suggest that a resistivity index < 0.495 in the ipsilateral internal carotid artery, with or without reverse flow in the superior ophthalmic vein, is associated with a reasonable probability of diagnosing DCCF.
Clinics | 2007
Andrea S. Doria; Fabiano G. Cunha; Marcelo Modena; Consuelo Junqueira Rodrigues; Alexandre Teles Garcez; Rui Maciel de Godoy Junior; Raul Bolliger Neto; Ivani Bortoleti Melo; Carlos Alberto Buchpiguel; Laszlo J. Molnar; Roberto Guarniero
OBJECTIVE In bone injury, repair results in local increased vascularity and bone marrow remodeling. Characterizing the vascular and metabolic imaging patterns of the proximal femur following an intertrochanteric osteotomy may help clinicians decide proper management of the patient. Our objective was to measure Doppler sonography and scintigraphy interval changes in the proximal femur following intertrochanteric osteotomy and compare imaging and histomorphometric measurements in the late post-operative stage (6 weeks after surgery) in a rabbit model of bone injury. MATERIALS AND METHODS Both hips of 12 adult rabbits were imaged with power Doppler sonography and scintigraphy prior to and after (7 days and 6 weeks) unilateral osteotomy. Accuracy of the imaging methods was evaluated using hip operative status and histomorphometric results (vascular fractional area and number of vessels per area unit) as reference standard measures. RESULTS A significant difference in the mean number of pixels was noted between operated and non-operated femura in late post-operative power Doppler examinations (P=0.049). Although without reaching statistical significance, the AUC of Doppler measurements (AUC=0.99) was numerically greater than the AUC of scintigraphy measurements (AUC=0.857+/-0.099) (P=0.15) in differentiating proximal femura with regard to their fractional vascular areas in the late post-operative stage. In contrast, scintigraphy tended to perform better (AUC=0.984+/-0.022) than Doppler ultrasound (AUC=0.746+/-0.131) to demonstrate the vascularity intensity per area unit (P=0.07) in the late stage. CONCLUSION Our results warrant further investigation to determine the value of different imaging modalities for assessment of pathologic changes following hip surgery. Power Doppler sonography demonstrated larger AUCs (representing higher accuracy) for the discrimination of vascular fractional areas and scintigraphy, for discrimination of the number of vessels per area unit.
Revista Brasileira De Cirurgia Cardiovascular | 1996
Fabio Biscegli Jatene; Paulo Manuel Pêgo-Fernandes; Hector van Dyck Arbulu; André L.S. Hayata; Roberto Kalil; Laszlo J. Molnar; Adib D Jatene
This paper reports our experience with the use of compound grafts in minimally invasive coronary artery bypass graft (MICABG). An alternative for MICABG is the use of compound grafts in cases where several coronary branches are to be revascularized, when internal mammary artery is demonstrated to be short, or branches off early. One female patient, 54 years old, with a lesion of 90% in the third proximal part of the left descending artery (LAD), was operated upon, submitted to MICABG by left rainithoracotomy. The left internal mammary artery (LIMA) was amply dissected by the use of a long electrocautery, with the help of a videothoracoscope, and a clip for ligation of the intercostal branches. Following the sectioning of the LIMA, there was absence of blood flow and technical problems at the distal third. This compromised segment was disposed off and the LIMA was lengthened using the interpositioning of a saphenous vein segment, making possible the anastomosis with the LAD. Surgery was three hours long and the patient extubated fours hours postoperatively; the left pleural drainage tube was removed on the third day. Patient follow-up was satisfactory, without clinical problems; patient left the hospital in the fifth postoperative day. Postoperative cineangiocoronariography showed anastomosis patency; echodopplercardiogram performed on the fourth postoperative month showed patency and high resistence flow. In conclusion, the use of compound grafts for MICABG showed to be an efficient alternative to amplify the extension of the LIMA, enabling anastomosis when this artery is short or presents flow problems, or even if there is intention of treating more than one coronary artery.
Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 2000
Ilka Regina Souza de Oliveira; Azzo Widman; Laszlo J. Molnar; J Fukushima; José Nery Praxedes; Giovanni Guido Cerri
Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 2002
Andréa S. Doria; Roberto Guarniero; Fabiano G. Cunha; Marcelo Modena; Rui Maciel de Godoy; Carlos Augusto Malheiros Luzo; Raul Boelliger Neto; Laszlo J. Molnar; Giovanni Guido Cerri
Pediatric Radiology | 2008
Andrea Doria; Fabiano G. Cunha; Marcelo Modena; Rui Maciel; Laszlo J. Molnar; Carlos Augusto Malheiros Luzo; Rahim Moineddin; Roberto Guarniero