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Dive into the research topics where Mark E. Lockhart is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark E. Lockhart.


European Journal of Radiology | 2002

Imaging of adrenal masses.

Mark E. Lockhart; J. Kevin Smith; Philip J. Kenney

Adrenal pathology may be discussed based on hormonal functionality of the adrenals, appearances on imaging modality, or pathological determination. There are three main categories of adrenal function. Hyperfunctional states include Conns or Cushings syndrome. Lesions with normal function may be detected incidentally. Hypofunctional states may occur from idiopathic Addisons disease or some bilateral adrenal pathology. The most common modalities for characterization of adrenal pathology are non-enhanced CT, often followed by contrast CT or chemical shift MRI. The common appearance on non-enhanced CT is a well-defined homogeneous lesion with low-density due to the microscopic fat present and adrenal adenomas. When density criteria are not met, many of these may be characterized as adenomas by washed out of contrast or signal decrease using in phase and out-of-phase MRI sequences. Other non-invasive modalities may incidentally discover adrenal lesions, but are not typically used in the work-up. NP-59 is an uncommonly used nuclear medicine technique which is very specific for adenoma when correlated with pathology on other imaging studies. In the rare cases where non-invasive imaging is non-specific, fine needle aspiration or core biopsies may be necessary. However, biopsies have associated risks including infection and hemorrhage. The imaging appearance of an adrenal lesion is often specific such that further imaging is not necessary. These lesions include adrenal adenoma, pheochromocytoma, myelolipoma, adrenal cyst, and some large adrenocortical carcinomas. However, the findings in lesions such as metastasis, smaller primary adrenal carcinomas, lymphoma, granulomatous disease, and many adenomas are not as specific. In the proper clinical situation, follow-up imaging may be necessary, or biopsy may be warranted.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2007

Internal Hernia After Gastric Bypass: Sensitivity and Specificity of Seven CT Signs with Surgical Correlation and Controls

Mark E. Lockhart; Franklin N. Tessler; Cheri L. Canon; J. Kevin Smith; Matthew Larrison; Naomi S. Fineberg; Brandon P. Roy; Ronald H. Clements

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of seven CT signs in the diagnosis of internal hernia after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. MATERIALS AND METHODS With institutional review board approval, the CT scans of 18 patients (17 women, one man) with surgically proven internal hernia after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass were retrieved, as were CT studies of a control group of 18 women who had undergone gastric bypass but did not have internal hernia at reoperation. The scans were reviewed by three radiologists for the presence of seven CT signs of internal hernia: swirled appearance of mesenteric fat or vessels, mushroom shape of hernia, tubular distal mesenteric fat surrounded by bowel loops, small-bowel obstruction, clustered loops of small bowel, small bowel other than duodenum posterior to the superior mesenteric artery, and right-sided location of the distal jejunal anastomosis. Sensitivity and specificity were calculated for each sign. Stepwise logistic regression was performed to ascertain an independent set of variables predictive of the presence of internal hernia. RESULTS Mesenteric swirl was the best single predictor of hernia; sensitivity was 61%, 78%, and 83%, and specificity was 94%, 89%, and 67% for the three reviewers. The combination of swirled mesentery and mushroom shape of the mesentery was better than swirled mesentery alone, sensitivity being 78%, 83%, and 83%, and specificity being 83%, 89%, and 67%, but the difference was not statistically significant. CONCLUSION Mesenteric swirl is the best indicator of internal hernia after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, and even minor degrees of swirl should be considered suspicious.


Radiologic Clinics of North America | 2003

Renal imaging with ultrasound contrast: current status

Michelle L. Robbin; Mark E. Lockhart; Richard G. Barr

The application of UCAs to the kidney is still in its infancy; however, there are several areas of great promise. UCAs may replace CT in complex renal cyst evaluation and follow-up, eliminating the need for costly CT scans with their attendant potential contrast nephrotoxicity. This approach may decrease patient and physician uncertainty and improve diagnostic confidence. The use of UCAs is likely to be clinically useful in the evaluation of the indeterminate small renal mass on CT or MR imaging. Another probable useful application will be in renal artery stenosis. Routine application of UCAs may increase the percentage of diagnostic examinations, increase diagnostic confidence, and decrease examination times. It also will likely become the first line of evaluation in pyelonephritis, and be useful in immediate assessment of residual tumor after radiofrequency ablation. Of course, substantial additional work needs to be performed in large groups of patients to prove this currently optimistic outlook.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2010

Correlation between levator ani muscle injuries on magnetic resonance imaging and fecal incontinence, pelvic organ prolapse, and urinary incontinence in primiparous women

Marta E. Heilbrun; Ingrid Nygaard; Mark E. Lockhart; Holly E. Richter; Morton B. Brown; Kimberley S. Kenton; David D. Rahn; John V. Thomas; Alison C. Weidner; Charles W. Nager; John O.L. DeLancey

OBJECTIVE The objective of the study was to correlate the presence of major levator ani muscle (LAM) injuries on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with fecal incontinence (FI), pelvic organ prolapse (POP), and urinary incontinence (UI) in primiparous women 6-12 months postpartum. STUDY DESIGN A published scoring system was used to characterize LAM injuries on MRI dichotomously (MRI negative, no/mild vs MRI positive, major). RESULTS Major LAM injuries were observed in 17 of 89 (19.1%) women who delivered vaginally with external anal sphincter (EAS) injuries, 3 of 88 (3.5%) who delivered vaginally without EAS injury, and 0 of 29 (0%) who delivered by cesarean section before labor (P=.0005). Among women with EAS injuries, those with major LAM injuries trended toward more FI, 35.3% vs 16.7% (P=.10) and POP, 35.3% vs 15.5% (P=.09), but not UI (P=1.0). CONCLUSION These data support the growing body of literature suggesting that both EAS and LAM are important for fecal continence and that multiple injuries contribute to pelvic floor dysfunction.


Clinical Radiology | 2013

Single-source dual-energy spectral multidetector CT of pancreatic adenocarcinoma: Optimization of energy level viewing significantly increases lesion contrast

Bhavik N. Patel; John V. Thomas; Mark E. Lockhart; Lincoln L. Berland; Desiree E. Morgan

AIM To evaluate lesion contrast in pancreatic adenocarcinoma patients using spectral multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) analysis. MATERIALS AND METHODS The present institutional review board-approved, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA)-compliant retrospective study evaluated 64 consecutive adults with pancreatic adenocarcinoma examined using a standardized, multiphasic protocol on a single-source, dual-energy MDCT system. Pancreatic phase images (35 s) were acquired in dual-energy mode; unenhanced and portal venous phases used standard MDCT. Lesion contrast was evaluated on an independent workstation using dual-energy analysis software, comparing tumour to non-tumoural pancreas attenuation (HU) differences and tumour diameter at three energy levels: 70 keV; individual subject-optimized viewing energy level (based on the maximum contrast-to-noise ratio, CNR); and 45 keV. The image noise was measured for the same three energies. Differences in lesion contrast, diameter, and noise between the different energy levels were analysed using analysis of variance (ANOVA). Quantitative differences in contrast gain between 70 keV and CNR-optimized viewing energies, and between CNR-optimized and 45 keV were compared using the paired t-test. RESULTS Thirty-four women and 30 men (mean age 68 years) had a mean tumour diameter of 3.6 cm. The median optimized energy level was 50 keV (range 40-77). The mean ± SD lesion contrast values (non-tumoural pancreas - tumour attenuation) were: 57 ± 29, 115 ± 70, and 146 ± 74 HU (p = 0.0005); the lengths of the tumours were: 3.6, 3.3, and 3.1 cm, respectively (p = 0.026); and the contrast to noise ratios were: 24 ± 7, 39 ± 12, and 59 ± 17 (p = 0.0005) for 70 keV, the optimized energy level, and 45 keV, respectively. For individuals, the mean ± SD contrast gain from 70 keV to the optimized energy level was 59 ± 45 HU; and the mean ± SD contrast gain from the optimized energy level to 45 keV was 31 ± 25 HU (p = 0.007). CONCLUSION Significantly increased pancreatic lesion contrast was noted at lower viewing energies using spectral MDCT. Individual patient CNR-optimized energy level images have the potential to improve lesion conspicuity.


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2011

Medial Fibrosis, Vascular Calcification, Intimal Hyperplasia, and Arteriovenous Fistula Maturation

Michael Allon; Silvio Litovsky; Carlton J. Young; Mark H. Deierhoi; Jeremy Goodman; Michael J. Hanaway; Mark E. Lockhart; Michelle L. Robbin

BACKGROUND Arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs) for hemodialysis frequently fail to mature because of inadequate dilation or early stenosis. The pathogenesis of AVF nonmaturation may be related to pre-existing vascular pathologic states: medial fibrosis or microcalcification may limit arterial dilation, and intimal hyperplasia may cause stenosis. STUDY DESIGN Observational study. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS Patients with chronic kidney disease (N = 50) undergoing AVF placement. PREDICTORS Medial fibrosis, microcalcification, and intimal hyperplasia in arteries and veins obtained during AVF creation. OUTCOME & MEASUREMENTS AVF nonmaturation. RESULTS AVF nonmaturation occurred in 38% of patients despite attempted salvage procedures. Preoperative arterial diameter was associated with upper-arm AVF maturation (P = 0.007). Medial fibrosis was similar in patients with nonmaturing and mature AVFs (60% ± 14% vs 66% ± 13%; P = 0.2). AVF nonmaturation was not associated with patient age or diabetes, although both variables were associated significantly with severe medial fibrosis. Conversely, AVF nonmaturation was higher in women than men despite similar medial fibrosis in both sexes. Arterial microcalcification (assessed semiquantitatively) tended to be associated with AVF nonmaturation (1.3 ± 0.8 vs 0.9 ± 0.8; P = 0.08). None of the arteries or veins obtained at AVF creation had intimal hyperplasia. However, repeated venous samples obtained in 6 patients during surgical revision of an immature AVF showed venous neointimal hyperplasia. LIMITATIONS Single-center study. CONCLUSION Medial fibrosis and microcalcification are frequent in arteries used to create AVFs, but do not explain AVF nonmaturation. Unlike previous studies, intimal hyperplasia was not present at baseline, but developed de novo in nonmaturing AVFs.


Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 2004

Preoperative Sonographic Radial Artery Evaluation and Correlation With Subsequent Radiocephalic Fistula Outcome

Mark E. Lockhart; Michelle L. Robbin; Michael Allon

Objective. Primary failure of forearm radiocephalic dialysis fistulas is common even when preoperative vascular mapping is used. Previous studies have suggested that low peak systolic velocity of the radial artery predicts subsequent fistula failure. The study goal was to evaluate whether preoperative spectral Doppler assessment of radial artery inflow can improve forearm fistula outcome prediction. Methods. Forearm fistulas were placed in 112 patients after preoperative sonographic mapping. Preoperative spectral Doppler sonography measured radial artery peak systolic velocity during tight fist clenching for 3 minutes and after fist relaxation. Vessel diameters and peak systolic velocity were assessed for predictive value based on subsequent fistula adequacy. Fistula flow rates were determined 6 to 12 weeks postoperatively in a subset of patients. Results. Failed and successful fistulas were similar in their preoperative arterial and vein diameters, resistive index, and peak systolic velocity during fist clenching and after fist relaxation. Specifically, there was no difference in fistula success with radial artery peak systolic velocity lower than 50 cm/s versus peak systolic velocity of 50 cm/s or higher. The change in peak systolic velocity after fist relaxation was highly predictive of subsequent fistula outcome among female patients in ad hoc analysis. Fistula adequacy for dialysis in women was 11% when the change in peak systolic velocity was lower than 0 cm/s and 50% when the change was 0 cm/sec or higher (P = .02). The postoperative fistula flow rates were lower when the preoperative change in peak systolic velocity was lower than 0 cm/s than when it was 0 cm/s or higher (316 ± 46 versus 781 ± 150 mL/min; P = .003). Conclusions. There was no difference in the preoperative peak systolic velocity or the resistive index of successful and failed fistulas. Measurement of the radial artery peak systolic velocity change after release of fist clenching was not useful in predicting outcomes in male patients but identified a subset of female patients with a very low likelihood of success. This criterion may merit further investigation in future trials.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011

Potentially Modifiable Factors Affecting the Progression of Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease

Vicente E. Torres; Jared J. Grantham; Arlene B. Chapman; Michal Mrug; Kyongtae T. Bae; Bernard F. King; Louis H. Wetzel; Diego R. Martin; Mark E. Lockhart; William M. Bennett; Marva Moxey-Mims; Kaleab Z. Abebe; Yan Lin; James E. Bost

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES The Consortium for Radiologic Imaging Studies of Polycystic Kidney Disease (CRISP) was created to identify markers of disease progression in patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS Linear mixed models were utilized to model effects of baseline parameters on changes in natural-log (ln)-transformed total kidney volume (TKV) and iothalamate clearance (GFR) across time in CRISP participants (creatinine clearance at entry >70 ml/min). Stepwise selection was used to obtain a final main effect model. RESULTS TKV increased from year to year, whereas GFR uncorrected for body surface area (BSA) decreased only at year 6. Higher lnTKV and urine sodium excretion (U(Na)V), lower serum HDL-cholesterol, and younger age at baseline associated with greater lnTKV growth from baseline to year 3 and to year 6. Higher lnTKV at baseline associated with greater GFR decline from year 1 to year 3 and to year 6. Higher BSA and 24-hour urine osmolality at baseline associated with greater GFR decline from year 1 to year 6. Higher U(Na)V and lower serum HDL-cholesterol at baseline associated with greater GFR decline from year 1 to year 6 by univariate analysis only. Associations seen during year 1 to year 6 (not seen during year 1 to year 3) reflect the time lag between structural and functional disease progression. CONCLUSIONS Serum HDL-cholesterol, U(Na)V, and 24-hour urine osmolality likely affect ADPKD progression. To what extent their modification may influence the clinical course of ADPKD remains to be determined.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2008

Racial Differences in Pelvic Anatomy by Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Victoria L. Handa; Mark E. Lockhart; Julia R. Fielding; Catherine S. Bradley; Linda Brubaker; Geoffrey W. Cundiff; Wen Ye; Holly E. Richter

OBJECTIVES: To use static and dynamic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to compare dimensions of the bony pelvis and soft tissue structures in a sample of African-American and white women. METHODS: This study used data from 234 participants in the Childbirth and Pelvic Symptoms Imaging Study, a cohort study of 104 primiparous women with an obstetric anal sphincter tear, 94 who delivered vaginally without a recognized anal sphincter tear and 36 who underwent by cesarean delivery without labor. Race was self-reported. At 6–12 months postpartum, rapid acquisition T2-weighted pelvic MRIs were obtained. Bony and soft tissue dimensions were measured and compared between white and African-American participants using analysis of variance, while controlling for delivery type and age. RESULTS: The pelvic inlet was wider among 178 white women than 56 African-American women (10.7±0.7 cm compared with 10.0.+0.7 cm, P<.001). The outlet was also wider (mean intertuberous diameter 12.3±1.0 cm compared with 11.8±0.9 cm, P<.001). There were no significant differences between racial groups in interspinous diameter, angle of the subpubic arch, anteroposterior conjugate, levator thickness, or levator hiatus. In addition, among women who delivered vaginally without a sphincter tear, African-American women had more pelvic floor mobility than white women. This difference was not observed among women who had sustained an obstetric sphincter tear. CONCLUSION: White women have a wider pelvic inlet, wider outlet, and shallower anteroposterior outlet than African-American women. In addition, after vaginal delivery, white women demonstrate less pelvic floor mobility. These differences may contribute to observed racial differences in obstetric outcomes and to the development of pelvic floor disorders. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2008

Reversed Diastolic Flow in the Renal Transplant: Perioperative Implications Versus Transplants Older Than 1 Month

Mark E. Lockhart; Charles G. Wells; Desiree E. Morgan; Naomi S. Fineberg; Michelle L. Robbin

OBJECTIVE The purpose of our study was to evaluate the causes, waveform morphology, and clinical outcomes of high-resistance reversed diastolic flow in transplanted kidneys. MATERIALS AND METHODS To identify patients with reversed diastolic flow, we performed a review of 5,089 renal transplant Doppler sonograms obtained over a 10-year period. Waveform morphology was correlated with surgical-histologic findings and clinical outcomes. RESULTS Fifty-nine patients (33 male, 26 female; age range, 14-69 years) with reversed diastolic flow fell into three chronologic groups: acute group (six patients), transplant < 24 hours; perioperative group (34 patients), transplant < or = 30 days; and long-term group (19 patients), transplant > 30 days. Acute reversed diastolic flow was associated with higher likelihood of graft survival (p = 0.001, Fishers exact test) compared with reversed diastolic flow discovered in the perioperative or long-term group. In the acute group, hematoma, acute tubular necrosis, renal vein thrombosis, and vascular kink produced reversed diastolic flow. The causes of reversed diastolic flow for the perioperative group were acute tubular necrosis, rejection, and renal vein thrombosis; for the long-term group, reasons for diastolic reversal were rejection, glomerulosclerosis, low cardiac output, and diabetic nephrosclerosis. The causes of reversed diastolic flow were not differentiated by waveform morphology. CONCLUSION The causes of reversed diastolic flow cannot be distinguished by waveform morphology. Patients with reversed diastolic flow < 24 hours after transplantation warrant emergent exploration because correction of treatable causes may lead to recovered function. Long-standing renal transplants with reversed diastolic flow are not likely salvageable.

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Michelle L. Robbin

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Michael Allon

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Cheri L. Canon

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Desiree E. Morgan

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Peter N. Kolettis

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Heidi Umphrey

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Lincoln L. Berland

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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J. Kevin Smith

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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