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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1084
    Keywords: Breast neoplasms, diagnosis ; Breast neoplasms, MR studies ; MRI, Gd-DTPA ; MRI, technology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract State-of-the-art screening mammography allows the detection of nonpalpable breast lesions in approximately 30 % of patients. The presence of clustered microcalcifications without evidence of solid tumors usually requires further investigations, mainly biopsy. A 1.5-T magnet with a single breast coil was used to evaluate 32 patients with indeterminate mammography suggestive of microcalcifications prior to surgery. Both spin-echo (SE) and gradient-echo (GE; 2D fast low-angle short [FLASH]) techniques were utilized before and after injection of 0.2 mmol/kg Gd-DTPA. Upon surgery tumor diameters ranged between 3 and 10 mm. Use of MRI demonstrated 87.5 % overall accuracy, 83.3 % sensitivity, and 92.9 % specificity. False-negative MRI results were in situ carcinomas less than 5 mm in size. All the correctly diagnosed carcinomas measured between 5 and 10 mm. Partial volume is probably the greatest limit of this technique and lesions equal to or smaller than 5 mm are only rarely detected. The GE and SE sequences demonstrated comparable results.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 57 (1985), S. 456-463 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Purkinje cell ; Climbing fibres ; Inferior olive ; Cerebellum ; Anaesthesia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Previous experiments performed in rats under barbiturate anaesthesia have shown a remarkable increase of simple spike firing rate in cerebellar Purkinje cells following inferior olive lesion or inactivation. The increase is due, at least in part, to the withdrawal of the tonic background activity of corticocerebellar interneurones, which have GABA as a chemical transmitter. Since barbiturates potentiate GABAergic inhibition, it is possible that the effect is due to the presence of this type of anaesthesia. In absence of general anaesthesia, we have compared the simple spike firing rate of the Purkinje cells in rats with intact inferior olive and 3–5 days after inferior olive lesion by 3-acetylpyridine. In the latter condition, the firing rate is significantly higher. In other rats, under urethane anaesthesia, which is not known to interfere with GABAergic transmission, the inferior olive has been reversibly inactivated by applying a cooling probe to the ventral surface of the medulla. Following cooling of the inferior olive on one side, a remarkable increase of simple spike activity, parallel to the disappearance of complex spike activity, has been observed in the Purkinje cells of the contralateral side. These results show that the presence of the simple spike firing increase, which follows the removal of the climbing fibre activity, does not depend on an anaesthetic which potentiates GABAergic transmission, although its amplitude is affected by the same anaesthetic. They suggest, therefore, that the tonic inhibition exerted by the olivocerebellar pathway on the Purkinje cells operates also in physiological conditions. By analysing the pattern of discharge of the Purkinje cell simple spikes in intact rats and following suppression of inferior olive activity, we have seen that, in the latter condition, the highest firing rate is accompanied by a higher degree of regularity. This change of pattern does not depend significantly on the removal of an irregularity induced by the complex spikes, but it is mainly the consequence of the firing rate increase.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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