Teresita L. Angtuaco
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
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Ultrasound Quarterly | 2007
Teresita L. Angtuaco; Robert H. Hopkins; Terry J. Dubose; Zoran Bursac; Michael J. Angtuaco; Ernest J. Ferris
Abstract: This project was designed to test the feasibility of introducing ultrasound to senior medical students as a primary diagnostic tool in the evaluation of patients. Specifically, its aim was to determine if it is possible for medical students untrained in sonography to gain basic competence in performing abdominal ultrasound with limited didactic and hands-on instructions. Registered sonographers provided the students with hands-on instructions on the use of a compact ultrasound system. They were likewise shown how to evaluate specific organs and perform measurements. The results of the student measurements and those obtained by the sonographers were compared. There was close correlation between the results obtained by sonographers and students on both normal and abnormal findings. This supports the concept that medical students can be taught basic ultrasound skills with limited didactic and hands-on instructions with the potential of using these skills in the patient clinics as an adjunct to routine physical diagnosis.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1988
Mary B. Harris; Teresita L. Angtuaco; Cynthia N. Frazier; Donald R. Mattison
Abdominal pregnancy is an uncommon occurrence, and diagnosis by conventional means is often difficult. A case is presented in which a 29-week viable abdominal pregnancy was diagnosed by magnetic resonance imaging.
Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography | 1987
Hemendra Shah; Williamson Mr; Boyd Cm; Balachandran S; Teresita L. Angtuaco; McConnell
The diagnosis of abdominal actinomycosis is difficult because of its relative infrequency and imitation of other diseases. We present four cases in which these difficulties in diagnosis were experienced and show the utility of CT in suggesting this disease. Aspiration, biopsy, and proper culture technique, in conjunction with typical CT findings of transfascial and multiple organ involvement, led to the proper diagnosis in all cases.
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1987
T A Lange; C W Austin; J J Seibert; Teresita L. Angtuaco; D R Yandow
Fifty patients who had a palpable soft-tissue mass and an apparently normal radiograph were studied with ultrasound imaging before excision or biopsy of the lesion was done. As shown by the sonograms, thirty-five lesions had a discrete echo pattern (usually reduced echoes and a clearly defined lesional margin) and fifteen had an ill defined pattern (similar to the pattern of the surrounding normal tissues with no definable lesional margin). Fourteen lesions were malignant and thirty-six, benign. The sonograms of all fourteen malignant lesions showed a discrete pattern, while the sonograms of the benign ones showed twenty-one discrete and fifteen ill defined patterns. Therefore, the malignant lesions produced a discrete pattern in every instance, and every lesion that produced an ill defined pattern was benign. Fourteen of the fifty lesions were cystic; of these, thirteen were benign and one was malignant. The sonograms correctly identified the cyst in seven of the thirteen benign lesions and in the one malignant cystic lesion. Based on these findings, we concluded that all palpable soft-tissue masses that appear to be discrete on a sonogram should be diagnosed without delay by examination of a specimen taken at biopsy, whereas lesions that have an ill defined appearance on a sonogram may be assumed to be benign and may safely be observed in selected patients.
Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 2008
Harris L. Cohen; John P. McGahan; Barbara S. Hertzberg; Jon W. Meilstrup; Laurence Needleman; Beverly E. Hashimoto; W. Dennis Foley; Ronald R. Townsend; Mary Frates; Bryann Bromley; Teresita L. Angtuaco; Marie De Lange; Brian Garra; Stephen Hoffenberg; Richard Jaffe; Alfred B. Kurtz; Joan M. Mastrobattista; Jon Meilstrup; William D. Middleton; Thomas R. Nelson; David M. Paushter; Cindy Rapp; Michelle L. Robbin; Henrietta Kotlus Rosenberg; Eugene C. Toy; Lami Yeo; Julie K. Timins; Bill H. Warren; Albert L. Blumberg; Mary C. Frates
These guidelines are an educational tool designed to assist practitioners in providing appropriate radiologic care for patients. They are not inflexible rules or requirements of practice and are not intended, nor should they be used, to establish a legal standard of care. For these reasons and those set forth below, the American College of Radiology cautions against the use of these guidelines in litigation in which the clinical decisions of a practitioner are called into question.
Clinical Eeg and Neuroscience | 1989
William J. Nowack; Abdorasool Janati; Teresita L. Angtuaco
The clinical correlates and EEG characteristics of rolandic positive sharp waves in neonatal EEG have been studied systematically. Morphologically similar positive sharp waves have been reported to occur in the temporal areas (PTS). Their significance is, however, unclear. We reviewed fifty-two EEGs on patients from the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. Twenty-one of the EEGs which were reviewed had PTS. We correlated the PTS with the results of ultrasound of the head and with clinical evaluations. PTS are more strongly correlated with the occurrence of non-hemorrhagic than of hemorrhagic intracranial pathology.
Computerized Medical Imaging and Graphics | 1989
Michael Williamson; Hemendra Shah; R.R. Harper; Teresita L. Angtuaco
Emphysematous gastritis is a serious, often fatal condition. It is the result of destruction of the mucosal membrane with subsequent bacterial invasion of the stomach. We have encountered two cases at CT. Recognition is important since early intervention may be lifesaving.
Ultrasound Quarterly | 2005
Teresita L. Angtuaco
Prenatal ultrasound evaluation of the fetal brain requires documentation of specific structures according to guidelines set by the American College of Radiology and the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine. Among these required structures are: cerebellum, cisterna magna, lateral cerebral ventricles, choroid plexus, midline falx, and cavum septum pellucidum. All these structures can be visualized in three crucial planes of imaging that include cisterna magna/cerebellum, cavum septum pellucidum, and ventricular atria. A systematic approach can be achieved by instituting a protocol that includes these three basic levels of imaging of the fetal head. These anatomical levels should be incorporated in daily routine for complete obstetric ultrasound evaluation.
Current Problems in Diagnostic Radiology | 1999
Maria Luisa C. Fogata; H.Breckenridge Collins; Charles W. Wagner; Teresita L. Angtuaco
The accurate prenatal diagnosis of anterior abdominal wall defects is important because it affects patient management and prognosis. The pathophysiology of each defect leads to key characteristics that make it possible to differentiate one entity from another. Among these features are the location of the defect in relation to cord insertion, the size and contents of the defect, and the associated anomalies. This article reviews the underlying defects, the characteristic ultrasound findings, the associated anomalies, and the prognosis of simple and complicated abdominal wall defects. The basic features of simple abdominal wall defects (i.e., omphalocele and gastroschisis) were used as the initial points of assessment. A comparison of the different features of these abnormalities and how they differ from one another resulted in the development of criteria that facilitated the understanding of the different ultrasound manifestations of these anomalies.
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1996
William V. Good; Michael C. Brodsky; Teresita L. Angtuaco; Donna M. Ferriero; Donald C. Stephens; Yasmin Khakoo
PURPOSE To report a possible relationship between twin pregnancy and cortical visual impairment. METHODS Three children who had been the products of twin pregnancies were identified as having cortical visual impairment. One child (Patient 2), a dizygotic twin, developed cortical visual impairment after a preterm birth. Two children (Patients 1 and 3), the products of monochorionic pregnancies, developed cortical visual impairment. All children were examined ophthalmologically and neurologically. RESULTS An evaluation of the gestations of these children indicates that twin pregnancy per se was probably etiologic in the development of cortical visual impairment. In Patient 2, twin pregnancy probably caused preterm birth and resulting cortical visual impairment. In Patients 1 and 3, twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome was the cause of cortical visual impairment. In Patient 1, fetal demise precipitated an acute twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome. CONCLUSIONS Children who show cortical visual impairment at or shortly after birth should be evaluated for the possibility of twin pregnancy. Twin pregnancy increases the risk of neurologic damage, including damage to the visual cortex, to optic radiations, or both.