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Dive into the research topics where Maria Assunta Cova is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Assunta Cova.


Clinical Imaging | 2007

Comparison of contrast-enhanced ultrasonography versus baseline ultrasound and contrast-enhanced computed tomography in metastatic disease of the liver: diagnostic performance and confidence

Emilio Quaia; Mirko D'Onofrio; Alessandro Palumbo; Stefania Patrizia Sonia Rossi; Stefano Bruni; Maria Assunta Cova

Aim: The aim of this study was to compare contrast-enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS) to baseline US and contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) in metastatic disease of the liver diagnosed or suspected by US during presurgical staging or postsurgical follow-up for primary malignancies. Materials and methods: Two hundred-fifty-three patients considered suitable for US due to the complete explorability of the liver and with one to five proven or suspected liver metastases at baseline US were included. All patients underwent US before and after microbubble injection, and multiphase contrast-enhanced CT. Independent panels of readers reviewed US and CT scans and recorded liver metastases according to a 5-grade scale of diagnostic confidence. Sensitivity, specificity (diagnostic performance) and area under the receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curve (diagnostic confidence) were calculated. Results: Reference standards revealed no metastases in 57/253, more than five in 59/253, and one to five in 137/253 patients. In patients with one to five metastases, CEUS versus baseline US revealed more metastases in 64/137 and the same number in 73/137 patients while CEUS versus CT revealed more metastases in 10/137, the same number in 99/137, and lower number in 28/137. Sensitivity, specificity, and area under ROC curve of CEUS (83%, 84%, 0.929, respectively) differed from baseline US (40%, 63%, 0.579, respectively; P 0.05). Conclusion: CEUS improved liver metastases diagnosis in comparison with baseline US while it revealed similar diagnostic performance and confidence to contrast-enhanced CT in patients considered suitable for US and with proven or suspected liver metastases at baseline US.


Radiologia Medica | 2006

Magnetic resonance diffusion–weighted imaging: extraneurological applications

Stefano Colagrande; S. F. Carbone; L. M. Carusi; Maria Assunta Cova; Natale Villari

Diffsion–weighted (Dw) imaging has for a number of years been a diagnostic tool in the field of neuroradiology, yet only since the end of the 1990s, with the introduction of echoplanar imaging (EPI) and the use of sequences capable of performing diffusion studies during a single breath hold, has it found diagnostic applications at the level of the abdomen. The inherent sensitivity to motion and the magnetic susceptibility of Dw sequences nonetheless still create problems in the study of the abdomen due to artefacts caused by the heartbeat and intestinal peristalsis, as well as the presence of various parenchymal–gas interfaces. With regard to focal liver lesions, a review of the literature reveals that Dw imaging is able to differentiate lesions with high water content (cysts and angiomas) from solid lesions. With regard to the latter, although there are differences between benign forms [focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH), adenoma] and malignant forms [metastasis, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)] in their apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) in the average values for histological type, there is a significant overlap in values when lesions are assessed individually, with the consequent problem of their correct identification. One promising aspect is the possibility of quantifying the degree of fibrosis in patients with chronic liver disease and cirrhosis given that the deposit of collagen fibres “restricts” the motion of water molecules and therefore reduces ADC values. However, even in this field, studies can only be considered preliminary and far from real clinical applications. The retroperitoneum is less affected by motion artefacts and similarly deserves the attention of Dw imaging. Here it is possible to differentiate mucin–producing tumours of the pancreas from pseudocystic forms on the basis of ADC values even though the limited spatial resolution of Dw imaging does not enable the identification of small lesions. Dw imaging may be applied to the study of the kidney to differentiate hydronephrosis from pyonephrosis and with regard to tumours, solid from pseudocystic forms. In addition, given that renal parenchyma has significantly variable ADC values on the basis of the anatomic section and physiological conditions, the possibility of assessing functional alterations is currently being studied. Indeed, a good correlation has been found between ADC values and glomerular filtration rate. With regard to musculoskeletal applications, the absence of motion artefacts in the regions studied has enabled the development of sequences less sensitive to magnetic susceptibility and with greater spatial resolution than EPI. Attempts have therefore been made to use Dw imaging in the characterization of soft–tissue tumours although the findings so far have been disputed. Greater agreement has been found regarding sensitivity of the technique in assessing response of these tumours to chemotherapy: tumour necrosis is thought to increase ADC whereas the persistence of vital neoplastic tissue tends to lower it. One of the most promising applications of Dw imaging is without doubt the assessment of vertebral collapse where a high ADC has been shown to be associated with an osteoporotic cause and a low ADC with a neoplastic cause. Nonetheless, even here, a moderate overlap between ADC values of the two types has been encountered. Dw imaging has also been used in the assessment of bone marrow cellularity: areas of tightly packed cells show a higher ADC value than hypocellular areas. In particular, no significant difference in ADC is noted between normal hypercellular bone marrow and hypercellular bone marrow secondary to lymphomatous infiltration whereas this difference is significant between hypocellular, normocellular and haematopoietic hypercellular bone marrow. With regard to the study of joints, the limited structure dimensions, particularly cartilage, creates technical difficulties related to spatial resolution and an adequate signal–to–noise ratio, problems that can only be solved by further technological developments. Lastly, a significant difference in ADC values between degenerative and inflammatory effusion has been found, a fact that may be explained as the result of the activity of hyaluronidase present in inflammatory forms, which causes a reduction in the concentration of hyaluronic acid with a consequent decrease in viscosity.


European Radiology | 1998

Effects of a dimeric vs a monomeric nonionic contrast medium on renal function in patients with mild to moderate renal insufficiency: a double-blind, randomized clinical trial.

M. Carraro; F. Malalan; R. Antonione; Fulvio Stacul; Maria Assunta Cova; S. Petz; M. Assante; B. H. Grynne; T. Haider; L. Dalla Palma; L. Faccini

Abstract. The efficacy and safety of nonionic dimeric contrast media in subjects with impaired renal function is largely unknown. The present study was aimed at determining the risk of tubular nephrotoxicity in patients with mild to moderate renal insufficiency who underwent intravenous urography (IVU) with the nonionic dimeric contrast agent iodixanol (Visipaque, Nycomed Imaging, Oslo, Norway). In a double-blind protocol 64 patients (55 males; mean age 68.3 years) with serum creatinine between 135 and 265 μmol/l who were to undergo IVU were randomized to receive iodixanol (a nonionic dimer) or iopromide (a nonionic monomer), 600 mg I/kg b. w. Renal function was evaluated before and 1 h, 6 h, 24 h, 48 h and 7 days after IVU with analysis of serum creatinine, urinary enzymes alanylaminopeptidase and N-acetyl-β-glucosaminidase, and urinary microproteins α-1-microglobulin and albumin. Renal function remained stable in both contrast medium groups during the follow-up period. No statistically significant differences were observed between the monomer and the dimer in terms of urinary enzyme and microprotein excretion or serum creatinine. Transient radiocontrast-induced nephropathy developed in 1 patient who had received iodixanol. The administration of the nonionic dimeric contrast medium iodixanol, or of the nonionic monomer iopromide, entailed a low nephrotoxic potential in patients with mild to moderate renal insufficiency undergoing excretory urography.


Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 1996

Investigation of laminar appearance of articular cartilage by means of magnetic resonance microscopy

Vladimir Mlynarik; Anna Degrassi; Renato Toffanin; Franco Vittur; Maria Assunta Cova; Pozzi-Mucelli Rs

Magnetic resonance (MR) images and relaxation and diffusion maps of articular cartilage were obtained to explain discrepancies in its MR appearance. Porcine specimens were studied only by MR microscopy. For human specimens a combination of MR microscopy and large-scale MR imaging was used. Common features in the laminar structures of human and porcine samples are described. It was found that the decay of transverse magnetization was nonexponential with a rapidly decaying component which prevented construction of reliable proton-density maps. Dependence of T2 values on the orientation of specimens in the magnetic field as well as magnetization transfer experiments supported the previous suggestions about a significant role of dipolar interaction with protons of collagen in the laminar appearance of articular cartilage. The loss of the laminar structure induced by rotation of the human cartilage specimen around the axis normal to its surface demonstrated nonuniform angular distribution of the collagen fibers within the layer.


Radiologia Medica | 2008

Evaluation of white matter damage in patients with Alzheimer’s disease and in patients with mild cognitive impairment by using diffusion tensor imaging

Maja Ukmar; E. Makuc; Maria Luisa Onor; Gabriele Garbin; Marianna Trevisiol; Maria Assunta Cova

PurposeThe objective of this study was to evaluate white matter tissue damage in patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI).Materials and methodsForty-seven subjects were evaluated: 14 patients with AD, 15 with MCI and 18 healthy volunteers. All subjects were studied using conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and DTI (32 directions) with a 1.5 T magnet. Fractional anisotropy (FA) was measured in the following regions: frontal, occipital, parietal and temporal white matter and in the genu and splenium of the corpus callosum. The results were compared between the different groups and correlated with the Mini-Mental State Evaluation (MMSE) scores.ResultsA statistically significant difference was obtained between controls and MCI patients (p<0.007) and between controls and AD patients (p<0.05) with regard to FA of the white matter in the splenium. A statistically significant difference was obtained between controls and AD patients with regard to FA in the genu (p<0.016). Moreover, there was a statistically significant difference between controls and AD patients considering the genu (p<0.016) and the frontal white matter on the right side (p<0.024). The MMSE scores correlated with the FA values measured in the genu, the splenium and frontal white matter on the right side. No significant differences were identified between patients with AD and those with MCI.ConclusionsDTI could be of value in the early detection of white-matter damage in patients with MCI and AD. The DTI values correlate with the neuropsychological tests.RiassuntoObiettivoValutare mediante risonanza magnetica (RM) con tensori di diffusione (DTI) le alterazioni della sostanza bianca in soggetti con malattia di Alzheimer (AD) e in soggetti con mild cognitive impairment (MCI).Materiali e metodiSono stati valutati 47 soggetti: 14 pazienti con diagnosi di AD, 15 pazienti con diagnosi di MCI e 18 soggetti sani di controllo. Gli esami di RM sono stati eseguiti con un magnete da 1,5 T mediante sequenze convenzionali e una sequenza pesata in diffusione con tensori applicati secondo 32 direzioni. È stata valutata l’anisotropia frazionaria (FA) a livello della sostanza bianca frontale, parietale, occipitale e temporale nonché a livello dello splenio e del ginocchio del corpo calloso. I risultati ottenuti sono stati confrontati tra i tre gruppi e con il MMSE test.RisultatiÈ emersa una differenza statisticamente significativa a livello dello splenio per quanto riguarda la FA tra i soggetti con MCI ed i controlli (p<0,007) e tra soggetti con AD ed i controlli (p<0,05), a livello del ginocchio tra i controlli e i soggetti con AD (p<0,016) e a livello della sostanza bianca frontale destra fra controlli e soggetti con AD (p<0,024). La FA è risultata correlare con il MMSE a livello del ginocchio, dello splenio e della sostanza bianca a livello frontale destro. Dal confronto fra i soggetti con MCI ed il gruppo con AD non è emersa alcuna differenza statisticamente significativa.ConclusioniL’utilizzo dei tensori di diffusione nei pazienti con AD e MCI consente una precoce valutazione del danno della sostanza bianca. I valori di DTI correlano con i test neuropsicologici.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2011

Acute Segmental Testicular Infarction at Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound: Early Features and Changes During Follow-Up

Michele Bertolotto; Lorenzo E. Derchi; Paul S. Sidhu; Giovanni Serafini; Massimo Valentino; Nicolas Grenier; Maria Assunta Cova

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this retrospective study was to assess whether contrast-enhanced ultrasound is useful for characterization of acute segmental testicular infarction. MATERIALS AND METHODS Twenty men with acute scrotal pain and suspected segmental testicular infarction underwent contrast-enhanced ultrasound. Three patients underwent orchiectomy. For the other patients, the final diagnosis was based on the absence of tumor markers and a change in the size or shape of the tumor during follow-up. Forty-nine color Doppler ultrasound studies (16 within 24 hours of the onset of pain; 14, 2-17 days after pain onset; 19 after 1 month or more), and 38 contrast-enhanced ultrasound studies (13 within 24 hours after pain onset; nine, 2-17 days; 16 after 1 month or more) were performed. RESULTS Fourteen of 16 lesions examined within 24 hours were oval, and two were wedge shaped. Eight lesions were isoechoic to the testis, six were hypoechoic, and two had mixed echogenicity. Twelve lesions were avascular and four were hypovascular at color Doppler examination. Contrast-enhanced ultrasound showed avascular parenchymal lobules in all cases and without perilesional rim enhancement in 12 of 13 studies. Two to 17 days after the symptoms appeared, contrast-enhanced ultrasound showed avascular lobules in all cases and perilesional rim enhancement in eight examinations. After 1 month or more, contrast-enhanced ultrasound depicted intralesional vascular spots in 12 of 14 infarcts. Perilesional enhancement was absent. CONCLUSION Recognition of lobular morphologic characteristics and the presence of perilesional rim enhancement at contrast-enhanced ultrasound can increase confidence in the diagnosis of segmental testicular infarction compared with reliance on gray-scale and color Doppler findings. Changes in lesion features during follow-up confirm the differential diagnosis from other testicular lesions and allow conservative management.


European Radiology | 2008

Value of contrast-enhanced ultrasonography for detecting renal infarcts proven by contrast enhanced CT. A feasibility study

Michele Bertolotto; Alberto Martegani; Luca Aiani; Roberta Zappetti; Stefano Cernic; Maria Assunta Cova

The effectiveness of contrast-enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS) in the evaluation of patients with acute renal infarcts was investigated, using contrast-enhanced helical computed tomography (CT) as the reference imaging procedure. Twenty-seven consecutive patients with acute renal infarcts detected with contrast-enhanced helical CT underwent CEUS. Digital cine-clips of CEUS were evaluated by two independent readers blinded to CT findings. Image quality was rated subjectively on a four-point scale. Then, readers were asked to assign a confidence level in diagnosis of renal infarct at the upper pole, medium portion, and lower pole of each kidney according to a five-degree scale, ranging from definitely absent to definitely present. ROC curve analysis was employed to assess the overall confidence of diagnosis of infarct, and weighted kappa values were calculated to assess inter-reader agreement. The subjective image quality of CEUS was lower than the image quality of CT at the upper poles. However, the diagnostic performance of CEUS was excellent (area under receiver-operator characteristic curve 0.992 ± 0.006 for reader 1; 0.991 ± 0.007 for reader 2), with very good inter-reader agreement (weighted kappa value = 0.83). CEUS is a reproducible tool to detect acute renal infarcts in men, with a diagnostic performance approaching that of CT.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2012

Utility of Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging to Differentiate Cardiac Sarcoidosis from Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy

David A. Steckman; Preston M Schneider; Joseph L. Schuller; Ryan G. Aleong; Duy Thai Nguyen; Gianfranco Sinagra; Giancarlo Vitrella; Francesca Brun; Maria Assunta Cova; Lorenzo Pagnan; Luisa Mestroni; Paul D. Varosy; William H. Sauer

Some patients diagnosed with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) are eventually found to have cardiac sarcoidosis (CS). Accurate differentiation between these 2 conditions has implications for immunosuppressive therapy and familial screening. We sought to determine whether cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) could be used to identify the characteristic findings to accurately differentiate between CS and ARVC. Consecutive patients with a diagnostic MRI scan indicating CS and/or ARVC constituted the cohort. All patients diagnosed with CS had histologic confirmation of sarcoidosis, and all patients with ARVC met the diagnostic task force criteria. The cardiac MRI data were retrospectively analyzed to identify possible differentiating characteristics. Of the patients, 40 had CS and 21 had ARVC. Those with CS were older and had more left ventricular scar. The presence of mediastinal lymphadenopathy or left ventricular septal involvement was seen exclusively in the patients with CS (p <0.001). A family history of sudden cardiac death was seen only in the ARVC group (p = 0.012). The right ventricular ejection fraction and ventricular volumes were also significantly different between the 2 groups. In conclusion, patients with CS have significantly different cardiac MRI characteristics than patients with ARVC. The cardiac volume, in addition to the degree and location of cardiac involvement, can be used to distinguish between these 2 disease entities. The presence of mediastinal lymphadenopathy and left ventricular septal scar favors a diagnosis of CS and not ARVC. Consideration of CS should be given if these MRI findings are observed during the evaluation for possible ARVC.


Academic Radiology | 2010

The Value of Digital Tomosynthesis in the Diagnosis of Suspected Pulmonary Lesions on Chest Radiography: Analysis of Diagnostic Accuracy and Confidence

Emilio Quaia; Elisa Baratella; Vincenzo Cioffi; Paola Bregant; Stefano Cernic; Roberto Cuttin; Maria Assunta Cova

RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to investigate the value of digital tomosynthesis in the diagnosis of suspected pulmonary lesions on chest radiography. MATERIALS AND METHODS Two-hundred twenty-eight patients (133 men, 95 women; mean age, 70.8 ± 11.1 years) with suspected pulmonary lesions after initial analysis of chest radiography underwent digital tomosynthesis. Two independent readers (with 3 and 20 years of experience) prospectively analyzed the chest radiographic and digital tomosynthesis images on a picture archiving and communication system workstation and proposed a diagnostic confidence score for each lesion (1 or 2 = definitely or probably extrapulmonary lesion or pseudolesion, 3 = indeterminate, 4 or 5 = probably or definitely pulmonary lesion). Chest computed tomography was the reference standard examination. RESULTS A total of 251 suspected pulmonary lesions were identified. In 71 patients, digital tomosynthesis and computed tomography did not confirm any lesion. In the remaining 157 patients, 180 lesions were identified, including 112 pulmonary and 68 extrapulmonary lesions. In 110 (reader 1) and 123 (reader 2) lesions, correct diagnoses were provided after analysis of the chest radiographs. All lesions were correctly classified after digital tomosynthesis except for 14 extrapulmonary lesions (both readers) that were misinterpreted as pulmonary and 10 (reader 1) and six (reader 2) pulmonary lesions that were misinterpreted as pleural. Digital radiography versus tomosynthesis differed in accuracy (reader 1, 43% vs 90%; reader 2, 49% vs 92%; P < .05) and confidence by area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve (reader 1, 0.788 vs 0.944; reader 2, 0.840 vs 0.997; P < .05). CONCLUSIONS Digital tomosynthesis improved diagnostic accuracy and confidence in the diagnosis of suspected pulmonary lesions on chest radiography.


6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MEDICAL APPLICATIONS OF SYNCHROTRON RADIATION | 2010

The SYRMEP Beamline of Elettra: Clinical Mammography and Bio‐medical Applications

Giuliana Tromba; Renata Longo; A. Abrami; Fulvia Arfelli; Alberto Astolfo; P. Bregant; Francesco Brun; K. Casarin; V. Chenda; D. Dreossi; Markéta Holá; Jozef Kaiser; Lucia Mancini; Ralf-Hendrik Menk; E. Quai; E. Quaia; L. Rigon; T. Rokvic; N. Sodini; D. Sanabor; Elisabeth Schültke; M. Tonutti; A. Vascotto; Fabrizio Zanconati; Maria Assunta Cova; E. Castelli

At the SYnchrotron Radiation for MEdical Physics (SYRMEP) beamline of Elettra Synchrotron Light Laboratory in Trieste (Italy), an extensive research program in bio‐medical imaging has been developed since 1997. The core program carried out by the SYRMEP collaboration concerns the use of Synchrotron Radiation (SR) for clinical mammography with the aim of improving the diagnostic performance of the conventional technique. The first protocol with patients, started in 2006 has been completed at the end of 2009 and the data analysis is now in progress.Regarding applications different from clinical imaging, synchrotron X‐ray computed microtomography (micro‐CT) is the most used technique, both in absorption and phase contrast. A new software tool, Pore3D, has been developed to perform a quantitative morphological analysis on the reconstructed slices and to access textural information of the sample under study.

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