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Non-Tech : Auric Goldfinger's Short List -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: StockDung who wrote (9972)6/7/2002 2:11:04 PM
From: Axxel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19428
 
You sound like you have some real questions...give me a call...908-647-5750...I am not under some rock after all...



To: StockDung who wrote (9972)6/7/2002 2:27:51 PM
From: Axxel  Respond to of 19428
 
Injecting Cement Into Spine Without Dye Studies OK

Johns Hopkins interventional radiologists have demonstrated that cement
can be injected into the spine without prior, potentially dangerous dye
studies.

Percutaneous vertebroplasty (PV), injecting cement into the spine to bolster
it and relieve pain caused by tumors, compression fractures or other spinal
damage, is usually done in tandem with venography, fluoroscopic imaging
of the vertebral venous system using a contrast agent.

While venography helps clinicians identify potential sites of cement leakage
into the vertebral venous system, it uses a contrast agent to improve
imaging that can cause severe allergic reactions or pool in the treated area,
making it more difficult for radiologists to monitor the cement injection.

According to a Hopkins study published in the June issue of the American
Journal of Neuroradiology, however, venography prior to PV may not be
necessary. The study team led by Kieran J. Murphy, M.D., director of
interventional neuroradiology, found that in 205 consecutive PV procedures
without venography, there were no major complications or cement leakage,
showing PV can be performed in most cases without venography.

"Any time we can simplify a procedure and reduce the risk of complications
without compromising the efficacy of the treatment, we have created a
win-win situation," Murphy says. "Our results strongly suggest that
percutaneous vertebroplasty can be performed safely without the need for
this type of imaging."

In the study, the researchers performed 205 consecutive PVs in 137
patients without pretreatment venography. Patients were evaluated for
complications linked to bone cement injection. No major complications
were observed.

The three minor complications that occurred were not linked to cement
leakage.

More than 80 percent of the patients experienced major pain relief as a
result of the procedure, according to Murphy. - By Gary Stephenson

[Contact: Gary Stephenson]

07-Jun-2002