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Dive into the research topics where Thomas A. Powers is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas A. Powers.


American Journal of Surgery | 1996

Positron Emission Tomography to Stage Suspected Metastatic Colorectal Carcinoma to the Liver

João V. Vitola; Dominique Delbeke; Martin P. Sandler; Michelle G. Campbell; Thomas A. Powers; J. Kelly Wright; William C. Chapman; C. Wright Pinson

BACKGROUND Accurate detection of recurrent colorectal carcinoma remains a clinical challenge. Positron emission tomography (PET) using 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18FDG) is an imaging technique that allows direct evaluation of cellular metabolism. 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET was compared to computed tomography (CT) and CT portography for staging metastatic colorectal carcinoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS Twenty-four patients previously treated for colorectal carcinoma who had suspected recurrence to the liver underwent an 18FDG PET scan of the entire body. All patients had either a CT scan of the abdomen (n = 17), a CT portogram (n = 18), or both (n = 11). The final diagnosis was obtained by tissue pathology in 19 patients and clinical follow-up in 5 patients. RESULTS A total of 60 suspicious lesions were identified. Of the 55 intrahepatic lesions, 39 were malignant and 16 were benign. Of the 5 extra-hepatic lesions, 4 were malignant. The 18FDG PET imaging had a higher accuracy (93%) than CT and CT portography (both 76%) in detecting metastatic disease to the liver, and detected unsuspected extrahepatic recurrence in 4 patients. Although the sensitivity of 18FDG PET (90%) was slightly lower than that of CT portography (97%), the specificity was much higher (100% versus 9%), including postsurgical sites. 18FDG PET altered surgical plans in 6 (25%) of 24 patients. CONCLUSIONS 18FDG PET is extremely useful in staging patients with suspected metastatic colorectal carcinoma to the liver.


Circulation | 1995

Right Ventricular Performance and Mass by Use of Cine MRI Late After Atrial Repair of Transposition of the Great Arteries

Christine H. Lorenz; Eloisa S. Walker; Thomas P. Graham; Thomas A. Powers

BACKGROUND The long-term adaptation of the right ventricle after atrial repair of transposition of the great arteries (TGA) remains a subject of major concern. Cine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), with its tomographic capabilities, allows unique quantitative evaluation of both right and left ventricular function and mass. Our purpose was to use MRI and an age-matched normal population to examine the typical late adaptation of the right and left ventricles after atrial repair of TGA. METHODS AND RESULTS Cine MRI was used to study ventricular function and mass in 22 patients after atrial repair of TGA. Images were obtained in short-axis sections from base to apex to derive normalized right and left ventricular mass (RVM and LVM, g/m2), interventricular septal mass (IVSM, g/m2), RV and LV end-diastolic volumes (EDV, mL/m2), and ejection fractions (EF). Results 8 to 23 years after repair were compared with analysis of 24 age- and sex-matched normal volunteers and revealed markedly elevated RVM, decreased LVM and IVSM, normal RV size, and only mildly depressed RVEF. Only 1 of 22 patients had clinical RV dysfunction, and this patient had increased RVM. CONCLUSIONS Cine MRI allows quantitative evaluation of both RV and LV mass and function late after atrial repair of TGA. Longitudinal studies that include these measurements should prove useful in determining the mechanism of late RV failure in these patients. On the basis of these early data, inadequate hypertrophy does not appear to be the cause of late dysfunction in this patient group.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1999

Prospective comparison of radiologic, thoracoscopic, and pathologic staging in patients with early non-small cell lung cancer

John R. Roberts; Matthew G. Blum; Ron C. Arildsen; Davis C. Drinkwater; Karla R. Christian; Thomas A. Powers; Walter H. Merrill

BACKGROUND More accurate staging at the time of initial presentation could improve design of clinical trials and avoid inappropriate surgical decisions in individual patients. Preresection staging of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is not straightforward, especially in patients with negative mediastinal nodes. The purpose of this study was to compare the results of radiologic, thoracoscopic, and pathologic staging in patients with NSCLC and negative mediastinoscopy. METHODS All patients with NSCLC underwent computed tomographic (CT) scanning before surgical staging with mediastinoscopy. Patients with negative mediastinoscopy then underwent thoracoscopic staging with examination of pleural surfaces, and identification of T (visceral and parietal pleural invasion, sampling of pleural fluid, and pleural lavage) and N (intraparenchymal and inferior mediastinal nodal sampling, if possible) stage descriptors before resection. RESULTS Thoracoscopy was more accurate than CT scanning in the staging of 50 patients with early lung cancer (stages IA, IB, IIA, and IIB), especially as regards T stage. Further, thoracoscopic examination ruled out malignant pleural effusions in 7 (14%) patients with radiologically obvious effusions, and identified radiologically silent malignant pleural effusions in 3 (6%) patients. Chest wall invasion was accurately identified at thoracoscopy in most patients. Finally, 3 patients with T1 lower lobe lesions and negative mediastinoscopy were found to have involvement of inferior mediastinal nodes (level 8 or 9) at thoracoscopy. However, thoracoscopy did not allow sampling of aortopulmonary window nodes in some patients with bulky left upper lobe lesions. CONCLUSIONS Errors in thoracoscopic staging resulted in no inappropriate operations. However, errors in CT staging would have resulted in operations unlikely to help the patients, or would have inappropriately excluded patients from surgery. Thoracoscopic staging was more accurate than CT staging in this cohort of patients with NSCLC and negative mediastinoscopy.


Investigative Radiology | 1981

Radionuclide measurement of differential glomerular filtration rate.

Thomas A. Powers; William J. Stone; Grove Rb; Plunkett Jm; Kadir S; James A. Patton; Robert D. Bowen

The authors sought to determine whether radionuclides could provide a reasonable estimate of differential renal function in five normal dogs and six dogs with unilateral segmental renal infarction. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) of each kidney was measured by the standard technique using constant infusions of 99mTc-DTPA, iothalamate, and creatinine following ureteral catheterization. These results were correlated with total GFR estimated by bolus injection of 99mTc-DTPA and analysis of the plasma 99mTc-DTPA disappearance curve obtained by blood sampling. Differential GFR was then calculated by multiplying the total GFR from double exponential analysis of this curve (DTPA2) by each of three measures of differential function. These include the percent differential uptake of 99mTc-DTPA and 99mTc-DMSA in the posterior projection as well as the geometric mean of 99mTc-DMSA uptake. There were good correlations between differential GFR calculated from iothalamate clearances obtained at ureteral catheterization and all noninvasive methods involving radionuclides and DTPA2 (r = 0.85 - 0.99). Single exponential analysis of the 99mTc-DTPA plasma disappearance curve was less satisfactory. The authors suggest that measurement of total and differential GFR calculated from plasma clearance of 99mTc-DTPA and external counting may be a useful method with potential clinical applications.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 1992

Staging lung carcinoma with a Tc-99m labeled monoclonal antibody

Vansant Jp; Johnson Dh; O'Donnell Dm; Stewart; Sonin Ah; McCook Bm; Thomas A. Powers; Salk Dj; William H. Frist; Martin P. Sandler

Thirty-three patients with biopsy-proven lung cancer and a total of 150 lesions diagnosed by conventional staging procedures were imaged using a Tc-99m labeled monoclonal Fab fragment of an lgG2B murine monoclonal antibody (MoAb) (NR-LU-10, NeoRx Corporation). Immunoscintigraphy demonstrated 100% of primary and 78% of metastatic lesions. MoAb imaging detected 88% of lesions in 12 small cell lung cancer (SCLC) patients and 77% of lesions in 21 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. Based on initial evaluation by other methods, 29 sites of MoAb activity were not associated with evidence of disease. Eleven of these were subsequently shown to represent sites of metastases; 18 remain unconfirmed. Four of ten patients studied with limited NSCLC had eight unsuspected lesions on MoAb imaging. Confirmation of unsuspected lesions in two patients altered initial clinical staging, and surgical therapy was abandoned. This study demonstrates that Tc-99m labeled NR-LU-10 can accurately stage patients with lung cancer.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 1989

Correlative radionuclide and magnetic resonance imaging in evaluation of the spine.

Dominique Delbeke; Thomas A. Powers; Martin P. Sandler

The authors retrospectively compared magnetic resonance images and bone scintigraphy obtained from 144 patients. Fifty-six patients having a known primary malignancy were evaluated for metastases (Group 1), and 88 patients were evaluated for back pain (Group 2). Interpretation was normal in 36/144 patients (11 in Group 1 and 25 in Group 2), and similar abnormal foci were visualized in the osseous spine in 54/144 patients (32 in Group 1 and 22 in Group 2). Magnetic resonance imaging showed abnormalities in the osseous spine that were not visualized on bone scintigraphy in 43/144 patients (10 in Group 1 and 33 in Group 2); these included bone metastasis, benign neoplasm (hemangioma), Schmorls node, intervertebral disk disease, and bone disease (osteophyte, spondylolisthesis, facet hypertrophy). In addition, magnetic resonance imaging showed epidural or paravertebral extension of the tumor or infection in 37/144 patients (30 in Group 1 and 7 in Group 2). Bone scintigraphy demonstrated abnormalities not visualized on magnetic resonance imaging in 11/144 patients (3 in Group 1 and 8 in Group 2). Bone scintigraphy showed abnormalities in locations not evaluated by magnetic resonance imaging but relevant to the symptomatology or disease in 42/144 patients (37 in Group 1 and 5 in Group 2). These data indicate that magnetic resonance imaging and bone scintigraphy are complementary. Bone scintigraphy remains the best screening procedure to show the location of abnormal areas in the spine and elsewhere in the skeleton. Magnetic resonance imaging is useful in differentiating neoplasm, infection, intervertebral disk disease, and, in some instances, degenerative bone disease.


Investigative Radiology | 1982

Radionuclide Measurement of Differential Glomerular Filtration Rate in Urinary Tract Obstruction

Thomas A. Powers; William J. Stone; Bruce A. Lowe; James A. Patton; Robert D. Bowen

In a previous study using dogs whose renal function was rendered asymmetric by unilateral infarction, the efficacy of technetium-99m (99mTc) DTPA and DMSA in measuring differential glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was demonstrated. The present study was undertaken to determine whether the same techniques were applicable to unilateral ureteral obstruction. Five normal dogs and nine dogs with partial unilateral ureteral obstruction had determination of glomerular filtration rate by standard techniques using constant infusions of iothalamate and creatinine after ureteral catheterization. These results were compared with total GFR as measured by single injection of 99mTc DTPA and analysis of the plasma disappearance curve. Calculated differential GFR was obtained by multiplying total GFR from double exponential analysis of this curve (DTPA2) by each of three measures of differential function. These included the percent differential uptake of 99mTc DTPA and 99mTC DMSA in the posterior projection as well as the geometric mean of 99mTc DMSA uptake. There were good correlations between differential GFR determined by iothalamate clearances at ureteral catheterization and all noninvasive methods involving radionuclides and DTPA2 ( r = 0.93-0.99). Single exponential analysis of the 99mTc DTPA plasma disappearance curve was less satisfactory than double exponential analysis. These results and those reported previously support the use of radionuclides in the determination of differential GFR in a variety of clinical situations.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 1982

Tc-99m DTPA uptake in soft tissue sarcoma.

Jane L. Tyler; Thomas A. Powers

A case of spindle-cell sarcoma which demostrates intense uptake of Tc-99m DTPA is presented.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 1980

Tc-99m-pyrophosphate bone scan in calcinosis universalis.

Thomas A. Powers; Juan J. Touya

The authors report an unusually severe case of calcinosis universalis with prominent bone scan findings.


The Journal of Urology | 1984

Glucoheptonate measurement of differential renal function

Thomas A. Powers; William J. Stone; William S. Witt; Linza T. Killion; James A. Patton

In previous studies using dogs whose renal function was rendered asymmetric by unilateral infarction or partial ureteral obstruction, the efficacy of technetium-99m diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid and dimercaptosuccinic acid in the measurement of differential renal function was demonstrated. The present study was undertaken to determine if technetium-99m glucoheptonate could also be used to quantitate differential renal function in these conditions. Five dogs with partial ureteral obstruction, 4 with segmental infarction and 2 with ipsilateral combination of both were studied. Seven to 10 days following these interventions the animals were given a bolus injection of 10 mCi Tc-99m glucoheptonate. This was acquired in the posterior projection on a minicomputer at 2 seconds/frame for 3 minutes. Static images were obtained anteriorly and posteriorly between 3 and 5 hours postinjection. The following day iothalamate and creatinine clearances were measured by ureteral catheterization. There was good correlation between differential function calculated from the 1 to 3 minute portion of the bolus study and that determined by the ureteral catheter studies, r greater than 0.99. Correlations based on the static images were less satisfactory due to pelvic retention in the obstructed animals, r = 0.73. We conclude that technetium-99m glucoheptonate may be used to determine differential renal function.

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James A. Patton

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Martin P. Sandler

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Jane L. Tyler

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Robert D. Bowen

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Dominique Delbeke

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Christine H. Lorenz

Washington University in St. Louis

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Davis C. Drinkwater

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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João V. Vitola

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Matthew G. Blum

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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