Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Patrick A. Turski is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Patrick A. Turski.


Neuroreport | 1996

Human amygdala activation detected with echo-planar functional magnetic resonance imaging

William Irwin; Richard J. Davidson; Mark J. Lowe; Bryan J. Mock; James A. Sorenson; Patrick A. Turski

Echo-Planar functional magnetic resonance imaging (EP-fMRI) was used to study the activity of the amygdala while three normal female subjects viewed alternating blocks of affectively neutral and affectively negative still pictures. Bilateral activation in the amygdala that was significantly correlated with the changing valence of the visual stimuli was found in all three subjects. These findings are consistent with the large corpus of data from non-human studies suggesting that the amygdala is a key structure for extracting the affective significance from external stimuli. This is the first known report of phasic amygdala activation detected with EP-fMRI in normal human subjects responding to affective stimuli.


NeuroImage | 1998

Reproducibility of fMRI Results across Four Institutions Using a Spatial Working Memory Task

B.J. Casey; Jonathan D. Cohen; Kathy O'Craven; Richard J. Davidson; William Irwin; Charles A. Nelson; Douglas C. Noll; Xiaoping Hu; Mark J. Lowe; Bruce R. Rosen; Charles Truwitt; Patrick A. Turski

Four U.S. sites formed a consortium to conduct a multisite study of fMRI methods. The primary purpose of this consortium was to examine the reliability and reproducibility of fMRI results. FMRI data were collected on healthy adults during performance of a spatial working memory task at four different institutions. Two sets of data from each institution were made available. First, data from two subjects were made available from each site and were processed and analyzed as a pooled data set. Second, statistical maps from five to eight subjects per site were made available. These images were aligned in stereotactic space and common regions of activation were examined to address the reproducibility of fMRI results when both image acquisition and analysis vary as a function of site. Our grouped and individual data analyses showed reliable patterns of activation in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and posterior parietal cortex during performance of the working memory task across all four sites. This multisite study, the first of its kind using fMRI data, demonstrates highly consistent findings across sites.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1994

Stereotactic radiosurgery for glioblastoma multiforme: Report of a prospective study evaluating prognostic factors and analyzing long-term survival advantage

Minesh P. Mehta; Jeffrey Masciopinto; Jack M. Rozental; Allan B. Levin; Rick Chappell; Kenneth T. Bastin; Janet M. Miles; Patrick A. Turski; Shrikant S. Kubsad; T Mackie; Timothy J. Kinsella

PURPOSE Prospective evaluation of the toxicity and efficacy of radiosurgery with external beam radiotherapy in the management of newly diagnosed glioblastoma. METHODS AND MATERIALS From 5/89 to 12/92, 31 out of 51 patients with glioblastoma multiforme underwent radiosurgery, in addition to 54 Gy in 1.8 Gy/fraction following biopsy (n = 12) or resection (n = 19). Eligibility required supratentorial glioblastoma, tumor not > 4 cm in > 1 axis, age > 18 years, and location > 1 cm from optic chiasm. Patient characteristics were: age 20-78 years (median = 57); 22 male, 9 female; Karnofsky score 20-90 (m = 70), and volume of 2.3-59.7 c.c. (m = 17.4). Eighteen patients were treated with 1 collimator, 5 with 2, 7 with 3, and 1 with 4; peripheral isodoses were 40-90% (m = 72.5) and minimum and maximum tumor dose ranges were 10-20 (m = 12) and 15-35 Gy (m = 18.75). Patients were followed clinically and radiographically every 8-12 weeks to analyze survival, quality of life, and toxicity. RESULTS With a follow-up of 12-171 weeks, 8 out of 31 (26%) patients are alive. Median survival is 42 weeks. Twelve and 24-month actuarial survival are 38 and 28%. Comparison of the 2-year survival with previous Radiation Therapy Oncology Group patients was carried out using a nonparametric recursive partitioning technique and the observed vs. expected values are 28 vs. 9.7% (p < 0.05). Extent of resection and performance status were associated with improved survival in a multivariate analysis. No significant acute toxicity was encountered. Four patients (13%) developed clinically significant necrosis verified by biopsy or positron emission tomography scan at 9-59 weeks after radiosurgery. CONCLUSION The improvement in median survival in broadly selected glioblastoma patients treated with radiosurgery is difficult to determine, but the 2-year survival may be superior. Future randomized trials of radiosurgery are recommended, and ad hoc use of this modality should be discouraged.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2008

Improved 3D phase contrast MRI with off-resonance corrected dual echo VIPR

Kevin M. Johnson; Darren P. Lum; Patrick A. Turski; Walter F. Block; Charles A. Mistretta; Oliver Wieben

Phase contrast (PC) magnetic resonance imaging with a three‐dimensional, radially undersampled acquisition allows for the acquisition of high resolution angiograms and velocimetry in dramatically reduced scan times. However, such an acquisition is sensitive to blurring and artifacts from off‐resonance and trajectory errors. A dual‐echo trajectory is proposed with a novel trajectory calibration from prescan data coupled with a multi‐frequency reconstruction to correct for these errors. Comparisons of phantom data and in vivo results from volunteer, and patients with arteriovenous malformations patients are presented with and without these corrections and show significant improvement of image quality when both corrections are applied. The results demonstrate significantly improved visualization of vessels, allowing for highly accelerated PC acquisitions without sacrifice in image quality. Magn Reson Med 60:1329–1336, 2008.


Topics in Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 1994

Clinical Magnetic Resonance Angiography

Charles M. Anderson; Robert Edelman; Patrick A. Turski

What is MRA? time-of-flight angiography phase contrast angiography alternative methods post processing and display artifacts and flow phenomena the significance of instrument hardware flow quantification clinical perfusion and diffusion imaging the development of magnetic resonance angiography intracranial magnetic resonance angiography and stroke intracranial aneurysms magnetic resonance angiography of vascular malformations magnetic resonance venography and cerebral venous thrombosis neurovascular anatomy and common variants magnetic resonance venography of the body.


Journal of Neuro-oncology | 1990

High-dose multi-agent chemotherapy followed by bone marrow rescue for malignant astrocytomas of childhood and adolescence

Jonathan L. Finlay; Charles S. August; Roger J. Packer; Robert A. Zimmerman; Leslie N. Sutton; Arno Freid; Lucy B. Rorke; Eliel Bayever; Naynesh Kamani; Eric D. Kramer; Bruce H. Cohen; Beth Sturgill; James Nachman; Sarah Strandjord; Patrick A. Turski; Sharon Frierdich; Richard A. Steeves; Manucher J. Javid

Between April 1986 and March 1989, ten patients under 21 years of age with histologically confirmed malignant astrocytoma, received marrow-ablative chemotherapy with either thiotepa and Etoposide (five patients) or thiotepa, Etoposide and BCNU (five patients), followed by bone marrow ‘rescue’. Nine patients had glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), and one patient had an intrinsic brain stem anaplastic astrocytoma (AA). Seven patients were treated for recurrent tumor. Two patients who developed GBM as second malignancies were treated directly following surgical resection. One patient had received irradiation only for recently diagnosed cervical spinal cord GBM.Thiotepa was administered at a total dose of 600–900 mg/M2 over three days, Etoposide was administered at a total dose of 1500 mg/M2 over three days, and BCNU was administered at a total dose of 600 mg/M2 over four days. Non-hematopoietic toxicities have been mainly transient, predictable and acceptable, consisting of oropharyngeal mucositis, cutaneous hyperpigmentation, erythema and desquamation.Four patients achieved complete responses (CR), as determined by radiographic evaluation (CT and/or MRI) on day 28 post-marrow infusion. The mean remission duration of those with CR is 290 + days; two patients presently remain in remission. Two patients achieved partial responses (PR, greater than 50% tumor shrinkage) by day 28 post-marrow infusion; both developed disease progression, at day 61 and 94 post-marrow infusion, respectively. One patient, with a brain stem AA, had stable disease maintained for 13 months post-marrow infusion.With a total (CR + PR) response rate of 60%, these regimens merit evaluation in broader categories of recurrent brain tumor patients, as well as in patients with newly-diagnosed GBM.


Stroke | 2014

Does Aneurysmal Wall Enhancement on Vessel Wall MRI Help to Distinguish Stable From Unstable Intracranial Aneurysms

Myriam Edjlali; Jean-Christophe Gentric; Christine Régent-Rodriguez; D. Trystram; Wajih Ben Hassen; Stéphanie Lion; François Nataf; Jean Raymond; Oliver Wieben; Patrick A. Turski; Jean-François Meder; Catherine Oppenheim; O. Naggara

Background and Purpose— Arterial wall enhancement on vessel wall MRI was described in intracranial inflammatory arterial disease. We hypothesized that circumferential aneurysmal wall enhancement (CAWE) could be an indirect marker of aneurysmal wall inflammation and, therefore, would be more frequent in unstable (ruptured, symptomatic, or undergoing morphological modification) than in stable (incidental and nonevolving) intracranial aneurysms. Methods— We prospectively performed vessel wall MRI in patients with stable or unstable intracranial aneurysms. Two readers independently had to determine whether a CAWE was present. Results— We included 87 patients harboring 108 aneurysms. Interreader and intrareader agreement for CAWE was excellent (&kgr;=0.85; 95% confidence interval, 0.75–0.95 and &kgr;=0.90; 95% confidence interval, 0.83–0.98, respectively). A CAWE was significantly more frequently seen in unstable than in stable aneurysms (27/31, 87% versus 22/77, 28.5%, respectively; P<0.0001). Multivariate logistic regression, including CAWE, size, location, multiplicity of aneurysms, and daily aspirin intake, revealed that CAWE was the only independent factor associated with unstable status (odds ratio, 9.20; 95% confidence interval, 2.92–29.0; P=0.0002). Conclusions— CAWE was more frequently observed in unstable intracranial aneurysms and may be used as a surrogate of inflammatory activity in the aneurysmal wall.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1993

Combined use of duplex imaging and magnetic resonance angiography for evaluation of patients with symptomatic ipsilateral high-grade carotid stenosis.

William D. Turnipseed; Todd W. Kennell; Patrick A. Turski; Charles W. Acher; John R. Hoch

PURPOSE Advances in cerebral vascular imaging suggest that patients with critical levels of carotid artery stenosis (> 70%) who have symptoms can be identified accurately and necessary information about the intracranial and extracranial circulation obtained before surgery without conventional angiography. We have used carotid duplex imaging in combination with magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) to evaluate 20 patients with symptomatic ipsilateral high-grade carotid stenosis. METHODS All patients underwent CT and magnetic resonance imaging brain scans, as well as MRA and conventional arteriography of the cerebral circulation. Magnetic resonance angiograms were obtained with two-dimensional phase contrast and time-of-flight techniques. Phase contrast was used for intracranial vascular imaging and for determining qualitative flow velocities and the direction of blood flow in the circle of Willis. Two-dimensional time of flight was used to assess the carotid bifurcations. RESULTS Twenty patients with symptoms (six with strokes, 11 with transient ischemic attacks, and three with amaurosis fugax) had duplex evidence of high-grade carotid stenoses. Computed tomographic and magnetic resonance brain scans were positive for cerebral infarction in six patients with clinical strokes. Comparison of MRA with conventional angiography was 91% accurate for high-grade stenoses and occlusions (sensitivity 100% and specificity 90% for stenosis; sensitivity/specificity was 100% for complete occlusion). Comparison of duplex imaging with conventional angiography demonstrated 86% accuracy for detection of severe stenosis or occlusion (sensitivity 94% and specificity 89% for stenosis; sensitivity and specificity were 100% for complete occlusion). CONCLUSIONS This study suggests that combined use of MRA and duplex imaging is accurate for detection and evaluation of high-grade carotid stenoses in patients with symptoms.


Neuroreport | 2001

Multiple tactile maps in the human cerebellum

Khalafalla O. Bushara; John M. Wheat; Al Khan; Bryan J. Mock; Patrick A. Turski; James A. Sorenson; Benjamin Rix Brooks

Functional imaging studies of the cerebellum have mostly investigated motor performance or have been limited to the anterior lobe and therefore the somatosensory representations in the human cerebellum have not been fully demonstrated. We used fMRI of the entire cerebellum during tactile stimulation of the hand and foot in six normal subjects. Our results demonstrate that the tactile projections to the cerebellum in humans are represented in both the anterior and posterior lobes. in agreement with previous functional imaging studies, our results show a large-scale, between-limb somatotopy comparable to that shown in early animal studies.


Journal of The American College of Radiology | 2009

ACR Appropriateness Criteria® on Low Back Pain

Patricia C. Davis; Franz J. Wippold; James A. Brunberg; Rebecca S. Cornelius; Robert L. De La Paz; Pr Didier Dormont; Linda Gray; John E. Jordan; Suresh K. Mukherji; David J. Seidenwurm; Patrick A. Turski; Robert D. Zimmerman; Michael A. Sloan

Acute low back pain with or without radiculopathy is one of the most common health problems in the United States, with high annual costs of evaluation and treatment, not including lost productivity. Multiple reports show that uncomplicated acute low back pain or radiculopathy is a benign, self-limited condition that does not warrant any imaging studies. Guidelines for recognition of patients with more complicated status can be used to identify those who require further evaluation for suspicion of more serious problems and contribute to appropriate imaging utilization.

Collaboration


Dive into the Patrick A. Turski's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charles A. Mistretta

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Oliver Wieben

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kevin M. Johnson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charles M. Strother

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Howard A. Rowley

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yijing Wu

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frank R. Korosec

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas M. Grist

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cynthia M. Carlsson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge