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Dive into the research topics where Pushpender Gupta is active.

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Featured researches published by Pushpender Gupta.


Journal of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography | 2012

Imaging of infective endocarditis with cardiac CT angiography

Daniel W. Entrikin; Pushpender Gupta; Neal D. Kon; J. Jeffrey Carr

Infective endocarditis (IE) is a disease characterized by high rates of morbidity and mortality that can present with a spectrum of clinical and imaging findings. Cardiac-gated computed tomographic angiography (CTA) has been shown to be highly accurate in evaluation of both coronary artery disease and structural heart disease and is now considered an appropriate preoperative imaging modality in patients undergoing noncoronary cardiac surgery. This review discusses the use of cardiac-gated CTA in preoperative evaluation of patients with IE, with emphasis on imaging findings of valvular and perivalvular complications. Topics include technique tips specific to valve imaging with cardiac-gated CTA, potential benefits of cardiac-gated CTA compared with other imaging modalities such as echocardiography, limitations of imaging patients with IE with cardiac-gated CTA, and an overview of potential findings in patients with IE, including vegetations, valve perforations, perivalvular abscesses, perivalvular pseudoaneurysms, and fistulas. Throughout this review, cardiac-gated CTA findings of IE are presented with echocardiographic and operative correlation to emphasize that cardiac-gated CTA may in select cases provide incremental benefit in the preoperative assessment of patients with IE.


Academic Radiology | 2016

Big Data and the Future of Radiology Informatics

Akash P. Kansagra; John-Paul J. Yu; Arindam R. Chatterjee; Leon Lenchik; Daniel S. Chow; Adam Prater; Jean Yeh; Ankur M. Doshi; C. Matthew Hawkins; Marta E. Heilbrun; Stacy E. Smith; Martin Oselkin; Pushpender Gupta; Sayed Ali

Rapid growth in the amount of data that is electronically recorded as part of routine clinical operations has generated great interest in the use of Big Data methodologies to address clinical and research questions. These methods can efficiently analyze and deliver insights from high-volume, high-variety, and high-growth rate datasets generated across the continuum of care, thereby forgoing the time, cost, and effort of more focused and controlled hypothesis-driven research. By virtue of an existing robust information technology infrastructure and years of archived digital data, radiology departments are particularly well positioned to take advantage of emerging Big Data techniques. In this review, we describe four areas in which Big Data is poised to have an immediate impact on radiology practice, research, and operations. In addition, we provide an overview of the Big Data adoption cycle and describe how academic radiology departments can promote Big Data development.


Radiographics | 2016

Spectrum of Fat-containing Soft-Tissue Masses at MR Imaging: The Common, the Uncommon, the Characteristic, and the Sometimes Confusing

Pushpender Gupta; Tommy A. Potti; Scott D. Wuertzer; Leon Lenchik; David A. Pacholke

Fat-containing tumors are the most common soft-tissue tumors encountered clinically. The vast majority of fat-containing soft-tissue masses are benign. Lipomas are the most common benign fat-containing masses and demonstrate a characteristic appearance at magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Less common benign soft-tissue masses include lipoblastoma, angiolipoma, spindle cell lipoma/pleomorphic lipoma, myolipoma, chondroid lipoma, lipomatosis of nerve, lipomatosis, hibernoma, and fat necrosis. Well-differentiated liposarcomas (WDLPSs)/atypical lipomatous tumors (ALTs) are locally aggressive soft-tissue masses that do not metastasize. Biologically more aggressive liposarcomas include myxoid, pleomorphic, and dedifferentiated liposarcomas. At MR imaging, lipomas typically resemble subcutaneous fat but may contain a few thin septa. The presence of thick, irregular, enhancing septa and nonfatty soft-tissue mass components suggests liposarcoma rather than lipoma. However, benign lipomatous lesions and WDLPS/ALT often have overlapping MR imaging findings. Distinguishing WDLPS/ALT from a benign lipomatous lesion or from fat necrosis at imaging can be challenging and often requires histologic evaluation. We present the spectrum of fat-containing masses, using the World Health Organization classification of adipocytic tumors, with an emphasis on commonly encountered lesions, characteristic MR imaging findings associated with specific tumors, and overlapping MR imaging findings of certain tumors that may require histologic sampling. We also briefly discuss the role of molecular markers in proper characterization and classification of fat-containing soft-tissue masses. (©)RSNA, 2016.


Indian Journal of Community Medicine | 2016

Uterine rupture: A seven year review at a tertiary care hospital in New Delhi, India

Maruti Sinha; Ridhima Gupta; Pushpender Gupta; Rekha Rani; Ramanjeet Kaur; Rahil Singh

Objective: To identify the obstetric risk factors, incidence, and causes of uterine rupture, management modalities, and the associated maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality in one of the largest tertiary level women care hospital in Delhi. Materials and Methods: A 7-year retrospective analysis of 47 cases of uterine rupture was done. The charts of these patients were analyzed and the data regarding demographic characteristics, clinical presentation, risk factors, management, operative findings, maternal and fetal outcomes, and postoperative complications was studied. Results: The incidence of rupture was one in 1,633 deliveries (0.061%). The vast majority of patients had prior low transverse cesarean section (84.8%). The clinical presentation of the patients with rupture of the unscarred uterus was more dramatic with extensive tears compared to rupture with scarred uterus. The estimated blood loss ranged from 1,200 to 1,500 cc. Hemoperitoneum was identified in 95.7% of the patient and 83% of the patient underwent repair of rent with or without simultaneous tubal ligation. Subtotal hysterectomy was performed in five cases. There were no maternal deaths in our series. However, there were 32 cases of intrauterine fetal demise and five cases of stillbirths. Conclusions: Uterine rupture is a major contributor to maternal morbidity and neonatal mortality. Four major easily identifiable risk factors including history of prior cesarean section, grand multiparity, obstructed labor, and fetal malpresentations constitute 90% of cases of uterine rupture. Identification of these high risk women, prompt diagnosis, immediate transfer, and optimal management needs to be overemphasized to avoid adverse fetomaternal complications.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2015

High-Resolution 3-T MRI of the Fingers: Review of Anatomy and Common Tendon and Ligament Injuries

Pushpender Gupta; Leon Lenchik; Scott D. Wuertzer; David A. Pacholke

OBJECTIVE. With high-resolution 3-T MRI, the complex anatomy of the fingers can be imaged in exquisite detail to provide an accurate diagnosis of clinically important ligament and tendon injuries. CONCLUSION. We present our 3-T MRI protocol using a dedicated hand-and-wrist coil and review normal MRI anatomy of the fingers. We emphasize a systematic approach to the interpretation of finger MRI examinations and illustrate this approach with examples of tendon and ligament abnormalities.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2017

Variability in Patellofemoral Alignment Measurements on MRI: Influence of Knee Position

Alejandro Marquez-Lara; Jason Andersen; Leon Lenchik; Cristin M. Ferguson; Pushpender Gupta

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to determine the variability of distances between four distinct anatomic landmarks used for the evaluation of patellofemoral alignment while implementing controlled changes in patient positioning during MRI. MATERIALS AND METHODS Limited MRI was performed of 12 knees in healthy volunteers (10 men, two women; mean age, 28 years) with the knees in four different positions. The four landmarks used were TT (the most anterior point of the osseous tibial tubercle), TG (the nadir of the cartilaginous trochlear groove), PT (the center of the patellar tendon insertion on the tibia), and PCL (the medial border of the posterior cruciate ligament at its insertion along the posterior tibia). TT-TG, PT-TG, TT-PCL, and PT-PCL distances were measured on the MR images. Each distance was measured with the knee at maximum patient comfort (rest), full extension, 15° of flexion, and 30° of flexion. Linear mixed models with random intercepts were implemented to determine variability between measurements and knee position. RESULTS In general, measurements based on anatomic landmark and knee position varied greatly. The greatest variability in different knee positions was seen in mean TT-TG and PT-TG distances ± SD (TT-TG: rest, 18.1 ± 7.9 mm; full extension, 17.3 ± 5.3 mm; 15° of flexion, 11.4 ± 5.7 mm; 30° of flexion, 11.7 ± 6.0 mm; intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC] = 0.539; PT-TG: rest, 18.1 ± 6.3 mm; full extension, 17.9 ± 4.7 mm; 15° of flexion, 13.2 ± 5.2 mm; 30° of flexion, 11.8 ± 4.3 mm; ICC = 0.633). In contrast, knee position did not significantly affect distances for TT-PCL and PT-PCL (TT-PCL: rest, 23.5 ± 6.8 mm; full extension, 20.5 ± 5.5 mm; 15° of flexion, 22.8 ± 6.2 mm; 30° of flexion, 22.8 ± 6.7 mm; ICC = 0.484; PTPCL: rest, 23.4 ± 5.3 mm; full extension, 21.5 ± 4.5 mm; 15° of flexion, 22.3 ± 4.3 mm; 30° of flexion, 23.1 ± 4.8 mm; ICC = 0.509). CONCLUSION On MRI, TT-PCL and PT-PCL measurements have significantly less variability compared with TT-TG and PT-TG measurements, regardless of knee position. Although further studies are warranted, the use of TT-PCL and PT-PCL measurements may offer more reliable assessment of tibial tubercle lateralization and patellofemoral alignment.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 2013

PET/CT illustration of metastatic breast cancer to the left mandibular foramen.

Gopi Kota; Pushpender Gupta; Akiva Mintz

Mental nerve neuropathy (numb chin/lip syndrome) is a sensory neuropathy presenting with numbness in the distribution of the inferior alveolar nerve/mental nerve (chin and lower lip). This is typically unilateral and can be secondary to dental disease or malignancy. When caused by malignancy, these symptoms can be either an initial presentation of an unsuspected tumor or progressive metastatic disease, both of which would indicate poor prognosis. We describe a 48-year-old female patient with a history of breast cancer who presented with left chin numbness and manifested a metastatic lesion involving the left mandibular foramen on PET/CT and subsequent MRI.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 2011

Unilateral diffusely increased muscle uptake of F-18 FDG in a patient with hemiparesis due to stroke.

Pushpender Gupta; Gopi Kota; Abass Alavi; Akiva Mintz

Although normal muscles accumulate less F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) under normoglycemic conditions, FDG muscle uptake is frequently encountered on PET scans. However, diffusely elevated unilateral muscle uptake is not frequently seen. In this report, we demonstrate a case of unilateral muscle uptake in a patient with a remote history of stroke, possibly explained by increased spasticity, a shift toward fast twitch (type II) muscle fibers, and inflammatory changes that are all seen post–upper motor neuron injury. Thus, FDG PET may serve as a functional biomarker of the extent of upper motor neuron injury after stroke.


Seminars in Ultrasound Ct and Mri | 2017

CT Imaging of Complications Associated with Continuous-Flow Left Ventricular Assist Devices (LVADs)

Girish S. Shroff; Daniel Ocazionez; Bindu Akkanti; Daniel Vargas; Alheli Garza; Pushpender Gupta; Jayeshkumar A. Patel; Manish Patel; Igor Gregoric

Heart failure is becoming increasingly prevalent, and more patients are being treated with left ventricular assist devices (LVADs), either as a bridge to transplant or as destination therapy. The use of continuous-flow LVADs is on the rise. LVAD therapy is associated with several classes of complications, including bleeding, thrombosis, and infection. CT imaging can be used effectively to diagnose LVAD complications, including mediastinal hematomas and pericardial, abdominal wall, and retroperitoneal hemorrhage, inflow and outflow graft and aortic thrombi, and driveline and pump pocket infections. CT can also be helpful in cases of device malfunction and can detect outflow graft kinking and inflow cannula misalignment. When interpreting CT scans in patients with LVADs, accessory materials implanted with the device should not be mistaken for hemorrhage or calcification. With training in recognizing LVAD complications, radiologists can play an important role in the evaluation of patients with heart failure.


Current Radiology Reports | 2017

Fragility Fractures of the Pelvis: New Approaches to Classification and Management

Pushpender Gupta; Leon Lenchik; Pritish Bawa; Scott D. Wuertzer

Purpose of ReviewThe purpose of the present article is to review the new approaches to classification and management of fragility fractures of pelvis.Recent FindingsFragility fractures of the pelvis (FFPs) account for approximately 7% of fragility fractures and are increasing in incidence due to the aging population, an increase in life expectancy, and a more active life-style. The FFPs are characterized by isolated bone disruption and are generally more stable than high-energy pelvic ring fractures due to intact ligaments. Due to differences in the degrees of instability, the traditional classification systems (Tile or Young and Burgess) for acute pelvic ring injuries from high-energy trauma may not be applicable to FFPs. Through a classification system based on fracture location and the degree of instability, FFPs can be appropriately managed with either conservative treatment or surgery.SummaryFragility fractures occur in patients with primary or secondary osteoporosis from low-energy trauma or no known trauma. FFPs are different from high-energy pelvic fractures in the degree of instability and the approach to fracture management. Diagnosis of FFPs requires a high index of suspicion and the early use of CT or MRI to prevent long-term complications.

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Gopi Kota

Wake Forest University

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Akiva Mintz

Wake Forest University

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Akash P. Kansagra

Washington University in St. Louis

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Arindam R. Chatterjee

Medical University of South Carolina

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Daniel Ocazionez

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Daniel Vargas

University of Colorado Denver

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