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Dive into the research topics where Naomi P. Alazraki is active.

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Featured researches published by Naomi P. Alazraki.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1990

Technical aspects of myocardial spect imaging with technetium-99m sestamibi

Ernest V. Garcia; C. David Cooke; Kenneth Van Train; Russell D. Folks; John W. Peifer; E. Gordon DePuey; Jamshid Maddahi; Naomi P. Alazraki; James R. Galt; Norberto F. Ezquerra; Jack A. Ziffer; Joseph Areeda; Daniel S. Berman

Most reports to date using single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) with technetium-99m (Tc-99m) sestamibi have used acquisition parameters that were optimized for thallium-201. To fully utilize the superior imaging characteristics of Tc-99m sestamibi, there is a need to optimize the technical aspects of SPECT imaging for this agent. Performance can be enhanced through the careful selection of optimal radiopharmaceutical doses, imaging sequences, acquisition parameters, reconstruction filters, perfusion quantification methods and multidimensional methods for visualizing perfusion distribution. The current report describes theoretical considerations, phantom studies and preliminary patient results that have led to optimized protocols, developed at Emory University and Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, for same-day rest-stress studies, given existing instrumentation and recommended dose limits. The optimizations were designed to fit a low-dose-high-dose rest-stress same-day imaging protocol. A principal change in the acquisition parameters compared with previous Tc-99m sestamibi protocols is the use of a high-resolution collimator. The approach is being developed in both prone and supine positions. A new method for extracting a 3-dimensional myocardial count distribution has been developed that uses spherical coordinates to sample the apical region and cylindrical coordinates to sample the rest of the myocardium. New methods for visualizing the myocardial distribution in multiple dimensions are also described, with improved 2-dimensional, as well as 3- and 4-dimensional (3 dimensions plus time) displays. In the improved 2-dimensional display, distance-weighted and volume-weighted polar maps are used that appear to significantly improve the representation of defect location and defect extent, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


American Journal of Cardiology | 1990

Myocardial perfusion imaging with technetium-99m sestamibi SPECT in the evaluation of coronary artery disease

Jamshid Maddahi; Hosen Kiat; Kenneth Van Train; Florence Prigent; John D. Friedman; Ernest V. Garcia; Naomi P. Alazraki; E.Gordon DePuey; Ken Nichols; Daniel S. Berman

Technetium-99m (Tc-99m) sestamibi is a new myocardial perfusion imaging agent that offers significant advantages over thallium-201 (Tl-201) for myocardial perfusion imaging. The results of the current clinical trials using acquisition and processing parameters similar to those for Tl-201 and a separate (2-day) injection protocol suggest that Tc-99m sestamibi and Tl-201 single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) provide similar information with respect to detection of myocardial perfusion defects, assessment of the pattern of defect reversibility, overall detection of coronary artery disease (CAD) and detection of disease in individual coronary arteries. Tc-99m sestamibi SPECT appears to be superior to Tc-99m sestamibi planar imaging because the former provides a higher defect contrast and is more accurate for detection of disease in individual coronary arteries. Research is currently under way addressing optimization of acquisition and processing of Tc-99m sestamibi studies and development of quantitative algorithms for detection and localization of CAD and sizing of transmural and nontransmural myocardial perfusion defects. It is expected that with the implementation of the final results of these new developments, further significant improvement in image quality will be attained, which in turn will further increase the confidence in image interpretation. Development of algorithms for analysis of end-diastolic myocardial images may allow better evaluation of small and nontransmural myocardial defects. Furthermore, gated studies may provide valuable information with respect to regional myocardial wall motion and wall thickening. With the implementation of algorithms for attenuation and scatter correction, the overall specificity of Tc-99m sestamibi SPECT should improve significantly because of a substantial decrease in the occurrence of attenuation-related image artifacts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Radiology | 1975

Compartmental evaluation of osteoarthritis of the knee. A comparative study of available diagnostic modalities.

Roger H. Thomas; Donald Resnick; Naomi P. Alazraki; Dale M. Daniel; Richard Greenfield

The distribution and severity of osteoarthritis were investigated in 56 knees by history and physical examination, assessment of knee function, radiography with and without weight-bearing, double-contrast arthrography, and 99mTc-polyphosphate bone imaging. Compartmental involvement (medial, lateral, patellofemoral) was graded independently by 2 or 3 observers for each modality and was correlated with that observed during arthroscopy or direct surgical inspection. The more involved compartments were graded abnormal by all methods. In the less involved compartments, the gamma camera image was most sensitive to pathology, followed by arthrography. The choice of surgical technique and the prognosis depend upon accurate preoperative knowledge of the extent of disease.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2008

A Comparison of the Diagnostic Accuracy of 18F-FDG PET and CT in the Characterization of Solitary Pulmonary Nodules

James W. Fletcher; Steven M. Kymes; Michael K. Gould; Naomi P. Alazraki; R. Edward Coleman; Val J. Lowe; Charles Marn; George M. Segall; Lyn A. Thet; Kelvin Lee

CT and PET are widely used to characterize solitary pulmonary nodules (SPNs). However, most CT accuracy studies have been performed with outdated technology and methods, and previous PET studies have been limited by small sample sizes and incomplete masking. Our objective was to compare CT and PET accuracy in veterans with SPN. Methods: Between January 1999 and June 2001, we recruited 532 participants with SPNs newly diagnosed on radiography and untreated. The SPNs were 7–30 mm. All patients underwent 18F-FDG PET and CT. A masked panel of 3 PET and 3 CT experts rated the studies on a 5-point scale. SPN tissue diagnosis or 2-y follow-up established the final diagnosis. Results: A definitive diagnosis was established for 344 participants. The prevalence of malignancy was 53%. The average size was 16 mm. Likelihood ratios (LRs) for PET and CT results for combined ratings of either definitely benign (33% and 9% of patients, respectively) or probably benign (27% and 12%) were 0.10 and 0.11, respectively. LRs for PET and CT results for combined ratings of indeterminate (1% and 25%), probably malignant (21% and 39%), or definitely malignant (35% and 15%) were 5.18 and 1.61, respectively. Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.93 (95% confidence interval, 0.90–0.95) for PET and 0.82 (95% confidence interval, 0.77–0.86) for CT (P < 0.0001 for the difference). PET inter- and intraobserver reliability was superior to CT. Conclusion: Definitely and probably benign results on PET and CT strongly predict benign SPN. However, such results were 3 times more common with PET. Definitely malignant results on PET were much more predictive of malignancy than were these results on CT. A malignant final diagnosis was approximately 10 times more likely than a benign final diagnosis in participants with PET results rated definitely malignant.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1973

Gallium-67 for Localization of Septic Lesions

Richard L. Littenberg; Richard M. Taketa; Naomi P. Alazraki; Samuel E. Halpern; William L. Ashburn

Abstract Gallium-67 citrate was administered intravenously to 12 septic patients. Gamma camera scintiphotos and rectilinear scans showed focal accumulation of the gallium in 11 of the patients. In ...


Seminars in Nuclear Medicine | 2000

Sentinel node staging of early breast cancer using lymphoscintigraphy and the intraoperative gamma-detecting probe

Naomi P. Alazraki; Toncred M. Styblo; Sandra F. Grant; Cynthia Cohen; Travis Larsen; John N. Aarsvold

Sentinel node staging for breast cancer is increasingly used in place of axillary lymph node dissection but is not yet universally accepted. The problems of non-standardized methodologies and lack of consensus on the optimum techniques to identify sentinel nodes are being addressed. Complementary use of radionuclide imaging before surgery, intraoperative probe detection, and blue dye have yielded the best reported sensitivities for finding a sentinel node (94%). The importance of imaging is summarized as identifying sentinel node(s), distinguishing sentinel from secondary nodes, guiding surgical incision planning, and facilitating lower doses. The learning curve phenomenon, which applies to the surgeon and the nuclear medicine physician, has been recognized; measures to minimize it are being implemented. Radiation exposure to operating room and pathology personnel is very low; estimates of exposure to the surgeons hands are 0.2% of the annual whole body dose received by every human being from natural background and cosmic sources.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 1996

Dynamic lymphoscintigraphy to identify the sentinel and satellite nodes

Andrew Taylor; Douglas R. Murray; Steve Herda; John P. Vansant; Naomi P. Alazraki

Lymphoscintigraphy is increasingly used to identify the first draining node (sentinel node) in patients with malignant melanoma or breast cancer. If the sentinel node is tumor free then the remainder of the nodes in that specific nodal bed are likely to be free of metastases. Localization and biopsy of the sentinel node with an intraoperative surgical probe may obviate more radical lymph node dissection. Lymphoscintigraphy is conventionally performed by injecting the radioactive tracer in the four quadrants around the primary tumor and imaging the appropriate nodal beds approximately 30 minutes later. The visualized node nearest the tumor usually is assumed to represent the sentinel node. To test this assumption, a dynamic acquisition was obtained in 16 patients with malignant melanoma to determine if the node nearest the tumor was actually the first draining node. In one of 16 patients, the radioactive tracer injected around a thigh melanoma drained first to an inguinal node and then drained inferiorly to a second inguinal node located closer to the tumor. The distinction between the sentinel and satellite (secondary draining nodes) may have important clinical implications regarding the number of nodes that require surgical excision. In summary, static images do not define the pattern of lymph flow and the node nearest the tumor is not necessarily the sentinel node. Failure to obtain dynamic images may lead to misdiagnosis of the sentinel node in a small percentage of patients.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1990

Bone scans after total knee arthroplasty in asymptomatic patients : cemented versus cementless

Aaron A. Hofmann; Ronald W. B. Wyatt; A. U. Daniels; Lisa K. Armstrong; Naomi P. Alazraki; Andrew Taylor

The natural history of bone scans after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) was studied in 26 patients with 28 cemented TKAs and 29 patients with 31 cementless TKAs. The bone scans were examined at specified postoperative intervals. Radionuclide activity of the femoral, tibial, and patellar regions was measured. Six patients who developed pain postoperatively were excluded. Bone scans immediately postoperative and at three months demonstrated increased uptake, which gradually decreased to baseline levels at ten to 12 months. Radioisotope uptake was comparable in the cemented and cementless groups, but was highly variable in individual patients and in each of the follow-up periods. A single postoperative bone scan cannot differentiate component loosening from early bone remodeling. Sequential bone scans, as a supplement to the clinical examination and conventional radiography, may prove useful in the diagnosis of TKA failure.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1999

Prognostic Value of Thallium-201 Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography for Patients With Multivessel Coronary Artery Disease After Revascularization (The Emory Angioplasty Versus Surgery Trial (EAST))

Naomi P. Alazraki; Elizabeth Krawczynska; Andrzej S. Kosinski; E.Gordon DePuey; Jack A. Ziffer; Andrew Taylor; Roderic I. Pettigrew; Johnathan P. Vansant; Leslee J. Shaw; William S. Weintraub; Spencer B. King

The aim of this study was to investigate the relation between reversible thallium single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) myocardial perfusion defects at 1-year after revascularization and quantitative indexes in Emory Angioplasty versus Surgery Trial (EAST) and outcomes 3 years after revascularization in 336 patients. EAST was a randomized controlled trial assessing cardiac outcomes for angioplasty versus bypass surgery for patients with multivessel coronary artery disease. During this prospective trial, a substudy included the evaluation of the prognostic value of reversible defects on quantitative thallium SPECT. At 1-year after revascularization, 336 patients underwent SPECT thallium-201 stress myocardial perfusion and 3-hour delayed imaging. Subsequent events, percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty, coronary artery bypass graft surgery, myocardial infarction, and death, were recorded at 3 years. A stress-induced reversible thallium-201 defect was defined using a quantitative index of a reversibility score >30% and severity score >500. Reversible defects were observed more frequently in the percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty than in the coronary artery bypass graft surgery treatment groups (46% vs 27%, p <0.001). A total of 123 patients had stress-induced, reversible thallium defects and more events than patients with other perfusion results (freedom from all events was 81.3% vs 94% [p <0.001], and freedom from myocardial infarction and death 88.3% vs 95.5% [p = 0.031]). Quantitative thallium SPECT at 1 year after revascularization risk stratifies patients as to their likelihood of major cardiac outcomes.


Radiology | 1976

Ventilation-Perfusion Lung Images in the Swyer-James Syndrome

Charles W. O'Dell; Andrew Taylor; Charles B. Higgins; William L. Ashburn; Richard F. Schillaci; Naomi P. Alazraki

Ventilation-perfusion lung imaging appears to be a significant nonivasive means of supporting the clinical diagnosis of Swyer-James syndrome. Three cases are presented which display characteristic delayed washout of xenon from a small or normal-sized, underperfused hyperlucent lung.

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Samuel E. Halpern

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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