Papers by CHRISTOPHER J SALMON

The likelihood of interstitial lung disease being detected on highresolution CT scans and having ... more The likelihood of interstitial lung disease being detected on highresolution CT scans and having functional significance is often related to the severity of the disease. The extent and severity of the abnormalities seen on high-resolution CT are usually assessed subjectively. This study was undertaken to investigate whether a subjective semiquantitative scoring method or a method using a cumulation of the different high-resolution CT features of asbestosis were comparable in suggesting asbestosis in a group of patients with histopathologic confirmation of disease. A secondary objective was to compare the results of these two high-resolution CT methods with chest radiographs in the same population. MATERIALS AND METhODS. This study group consisted of 24 patients and six lungs obtained at autopsy. Histopathologic asbestosis was present in 25 of the 30 patients or lungs. The patients or lungs were imaged using selected high-resolution CT scans. The high-resolution CT scans were assessed in two ways. One used a subjective semiquantitative extent and severity score consisting of four levels of severity, while the other was a cumulative score adding the different types of high-resolution abnormalities in asbestosis. The commonest high-resolution CT abnormalities in the cases with confirmed asbestosis were interstitial lines (84%), parenchymal bands (76%), and architectural distortion of secondary pulmonary lobules (56%). Subpleural lines and honeycombing were less frequent. The histopathologic severity of asbestosis was independently graded on a four-point scale. Chest radiographs, when available, were classified according to the International Labor Organization (ILO) classification of pneumoconioses. RESULTS. With the subjective semiquantitative high-resolution CT severity score, asbestosis was suggested in 16 (64%) instances, all with disease. With the cumulative method, any one type of abnormality was present in 88% of cases with asbestosis, two types in 78%,
Volumes 1-3 of Beethoven's Conversation Books, translated and annotated by Theodore Albrecht, hav... more Volumes 1-3 of Beethoven's Conversation Books, translated and annotated by Theodore Albrecht, have been published by Boydell (2018-2020)� Ted is currently indexing volume 4 (May-September 1823), in which Beethoven confirms to an inquiring layman that he had met Mozart� Bertil Van Boer organized and ran the conference "Global Intersections in the Music of the 18th Century, " that took place virtually, under the auspices of the Society for Eighteenth-Century Music and the Royal Swedish Academy of Music, on August 6-7 and 13-14, 2021� He has also edited the symphonies of Franz Xaver Richter for a workshop that will take place in Italy next summer� Among the MSA members who gave papers at the "Global Intersections" conference in August were Bruce Alan Brown
The Newsletter is published twice yearly (spring and fall) by the Mozart Society of America Guide... more The Newsletter is published twice yearly (spring and fall) by the Mozart Society of America Guidelines for submission are posted on the website: www mozartsocietyofamerica org

American Journal of Roentgenology, 1995
The likelihood of interstitial lung disease being detected on highresolution CT scans and having ... more The likelihood of interstitial lung disease being detected on highresolution CT scans and having functional significance is often related to the severity of the disease. The extent and severity of the abnormalities seen on high-resolution CT are usually assessed subjectively. This study was undertaken to investigate whether a subjective semiquantitative scoring method or a method using a cumulation of the different high-resolution CT features of asbestosis were comparable in suggesting asbestosis in a group of patients with histopathologic confirmation of disease. A secondary objective was to compare the results of these two high-resolution CT methods with chest radiographs in the same population. MATERIALS AND METhODS. This study group consisted of 24 patients and six lungs obtained at autopsy. Histopathologic asbestosis was present in 25 of the 30 patients or lungs. The patients or lungs were imaged using selected high-resolution CT scans. The high-resolution CT scans were assessed in two ways. One used a subjective semiquantitative extent and severity score consisting of four levels of severity, while the other was a cumulative score adding the different types of high-resolution abnormalities in asbestosis. The commonest high-resolution CT abnormalities in the cases with confirmed asbestosis were interstitial lines (84%), parenchymal bands (76%), and architectural distortion of secondary pulmonary lobules (56%). Subpleural lines and honeycombing were less frequent. The histopathologic severity of asbestosis was independently graded on a four-point scale. Chest radiographs, when available, were classified according to the International Labor Organization (ILO) classification of pneumoconioses. RESULTS. With the subjective semiquantitative high-resolution CT severity score, asbestosis was suggested in 16 (64%) instances, all with disease. With the cumulative method, any one type of abnormality was present in 88% of cases with asbestosis, two types in 78%,
American Journal of Roentgenology, 1991

Upper and middle lobe bronchoalveolar lavage to diagnose Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia
The American review of respiratory disease, 1993
Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) remains the most common lethal opportunistic pulmonary infec... more Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) remains the most common lethal opportunistic pulmonary infection in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Although the use of prophylactic inhaled pentamidine has effectively reduced the frequency of primary and recurrent episodes of PCP, the aerosolization of pentamidine may have altered the localization of active PCP, resulting in more upper lobe disease. The distribution of disease may have also affected the diagnostic accuracy of standard bronchoalveolar lavage of the middle lobe, with a reduction in sensitivity from about 90 to 65%. In retrospective surveys of patients from our institution, Steiger and Fahy found that pooled multiple-lobe radiographic site-directed bronchoalveolar lavage resulted in diagnostic sensitivities of 91 and 100%, respectively. We performed a follow-up prospective study of 38 consecutive patients on aerosolized pentamidine in whom we lavaged both the middle lobe and an upper lobe. We found t...

The likelihood of interstitial lung disease being detected on high-resolution CT scans and having... more The likelihood of interstitial lung disease being detected on high-resolution CT scans and having functional significance is often related to the severity of the disease. The extent and severity of the abnormalities seen on high-resolution CT are usually assessed subjectively. This study was undertaken to investigate whether a subjective semiquantitative scoring method or a method using a cumulation of the different high-resolution CT features of asbestosis were comparable in suggesting asbestosis in a group of patients with histopathologic confirmation of disease. A secondary objective was to compare the results of these two high-resolution CT methods with chest radiographs in the same population. This study group consisted of 24 patients and six lungs obtained at autopsy. Histopathologic asbestosis was present in 25 of the 30 patients or lungs. The patients or lungs were imaged using selected high-resolution CT scans. The high-resolution CT scans were assessed in two ways. One use...

AJR, 1996
The purpose of this study was to determine whether diaphragmatic injury can be accurately diagnos... more The purpose of this study was to determine whether diaphragmatic injury can be accurately diagnosed with helical CT in a swine model. The hypothesis of our study was that thin-section helical CT with sagittal and coronal reformations can reliably detect injury of the diaphragm. MATERIALS AND METHODS. The study was performed in a swine model because of the similarity of the swine thorax to the human thorax. Ten swine had a limited abdominal helical CT (enteral contrast; 3-mm collimation; pitch, I) before and after surgical creation of a 6-cm posterolateral laceration in the left hemidiaphragm. A repeat scan was obtained after 5 cm of gastric fundus was sutured through the laceration. The gastric fundus was used because it is the most commonly herniated viscus in human diaphragmatic injury. No IV contrast was used. Control, laceration, and herniation scans were reconstructed with 1.0-mm overlap and reformatted in axial, sagittal, and coronal planes. Three observers scored each reformation as control or injury (defined as laceration or herniation) in a blinded and randomized fashion. RESULTS. Using helical CT, the observers were able to distinguish diaphragmatic injury from controls (p < .0001). The sensitivity and specificity were 92% and 87%, respectively, for sagittal reformations; 85% and 87%, respectively, for coronal reformations; and 73% and 80%, respectively, for axial reformations. Sagittal reformations proved superior to coronal or axial reformations (p = .01). The results were independent of individual observers: We found no significant difference in accuracy among the three observers. CONCLUSION. Helical CT can accurately detect diaphragmatic injury in a swine model.

High-resolution computed tomography sampling for detection of asbestos-related lung disease
Academic Radiology, 1995
We determined whether a limited number of high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) scans will e... more We determined whether a limited number of high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) scans will effectively screen for interstitial lung disease (ILD) in a population of individuals exposed to asbestos. We retrospectively reviewed the computed tomography studies of 49 patients exposed to asbestos. HRCT in the supine and prone positions had been performed at specifically preselected levels. Two teams of thoracic radiologists evaluated, on separate occasions: (1) all images, (2) prone images only, and (3) a single prone image through the lung bases for the presence of diffuse ILD. A relatively high level of accuracy was obtained with a single prone scan. However, improvement to 95% or better was found when additional prone images were used. A screening study for ILD, in this case patients exposed to asbestos, may be performed by preselected prone HRCT images only. The ease and decreased time of performing the procedure make screening relatively large patient groups for ILD more feasible.
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Papers by CHRISTOPHER J SALMON