CT Colonography vs Colonoscopy

NIA Diagnostic Imaging, 14th May 2023

Colorectal cancer (also known as bowel cancer) is the third most prevalent type of newly diagnosed cancer and the second deadliest type of cancer in Australia. CRC generally arises from the inner lining of the colon and is often characterised by polyps, which, if left undetected, can transform into aggressive malignancies. Despite the fact that optic colonoscopy is the golden standard for the detection of colorectal cancer, CT colonography (CTC) is regarded as a non-inferior alternative.…

TOBOGM has finally published – what has it taught us?

14th May 2023, Dr Chee L Khoo

TOBOGM is the very first study to see if immediate treatment of early gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) increases or reduces pregnancy complications among women with GDM diagnosed with OGTT before 20 weeks’ gestation. TOBOGM study results will significantly contribute to the management decisions of pregnant women with early GDM. Campbelltown Hospital was the lead recruiting centre with Professor David Simmons being the chief investigator of this international study.…

Dementia and T2D – how are the related?

14th May 2023, Dr Chee L Khoo

When we think about diabetic complications, we usually think about microvascular and macrovascular complications. We don’t often think about dementia as a diabetic complication. Diabetes has consistently been associated with an increased risk of dementia and its subtypes (Alzheimer’s disease and vascular dementia (1). As many with diabetes, especially T2D, are being diagnosed at a younger age, dementia relating to diabetes will increasingly be diagnosed and diagnosed at a younger age.…

Morton’s Neuroma – A case study

30th April, Spectrum Medical Imaging

All medical students will remember Morton’s neuroma but they never tell us what to do after you suspect the foot symptoms are suggestive of Morton’s neuroma. It also known as inter-metatarsal neuroma. It is a focal area of perineural fibrosis around plantar digital nerves of the foot. It is thought to be due to chronic entrapment of the nerve by the inter-metatarsal ligament and can be a cause of metatarsalgia.…

Anti-platelet therapy with PCI – what do you need to know?

29th April 2023, Dr Chee L Khoo

anti-platelet therapy

We have a increasing number of patients who has undergone a percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). This could be in the acute setting of an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) or electively during an exploratory angiogram. Stents used to be bare metal. Then came the first-generation drug eluting stents. The latest generation drug eluting stents are better at reducing subsequent thrombosis of the stented and unstented coronary segments.…

Neuropathic pain – what works and what doesn’t?

25th April 2023, Dr Chee L Khoo

We may not have many patients with neuropathic pain but patients with neuropathic pain can be heartsinks. Most of the time, nothing seems to work. It can be quite frustrating when anti-depressants after anti-depressants don’t work. The old tricyclics often don’t work either. What about pregabalin? Nope. What about gabapentin? Nope. What about long-acting opioids or tramadol?…

CT Coronary Angiogram – what is the prognostic value?

13th April 2023, NIA Diagnostic Imaging

CAD

A few months ago, we explored the role of coronary artery calcium score (CAC) as a cardiovascular risk assessment tool, and its importance in the prediction of future cardiovascular heart disease events and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (9). However, limited by the inability to assess the burden of non-calcified plaque which has low radiological attenuation, CT coronary angiography (CTCA) can be performed in conjunction with a CAC (6).…

Familial hypercholesterolaemia – is it really that rare?

9th April 2023, Dr Chee L Khoo

Familial Hypercholesterolaemia

One of the most important contributor to atherosclerosis is elevated cholesterol levels. Familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH) is a genetic disease that manifests as a disorder of cholesterol metabolism by mutations in hereditary genes usually in an autosomal dominant manner.  Data suggest that 1 in 200 Caucasians are heterozygous for FH and that 1 in 160,000–300,000 are homozygous, which are much higher prevalence than those estimated a decade earlier (1).…

Anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity – can we prevent it?

1st April 2023, Dr Chee L Khoo

Cardiotoxicity

Two months ago, we explored heart failure in cancer survivors exposed to anthracyclines in a dose dependent manner. Anthracyclines are a common agents used in chemotherapy against breast cancer and lymphomas. Heart failure may appear as early as within 12 months of receiving anthracyclines and the incidence continues to grow over time. There have been a lot of work done on the possible molecular pathways in the development of the cardiotoxicity, the prevention strategies explored and the development of “safer” anthracycline derivatives.…

High Resolution CT Chest – when to order one

30th March 2023, Spectrum Medical Imaging

HRCT

We are used to ordering chest CT when we suspect an inflammatory or infective condition in the lungs. Sometimes, we need more information than that. A HRCT CHEST is a CT technique in which thin-slice images of the chest are obtained and post-processed in a high-spatial-frequency reconstruction algorithm. When do you order a HRCT of the chest and when do you order an ordinary CT of the chest?…

Coronary artery disease – the changing management paradigm

26th March 2023, Dr Chee L Khoo

CAD

We have always known that revascularisation for coronary artery disease (CAD) improve symptoms (and quality of life) but sadly does not always improve survival. Mounting evidence indicates that non-epicardial coronary causes of angina and ischaemia, including coronary microvascular dysfunction, vasospastic disorders, and derangements of myocardial metabolism, are more prevalent than flow-limiting stenoses, raising concerns that many important causes other than epicardial CAD are neither considered nor probed diagnostically.…

Endurance athletes – do they have more CV events?

25th March 2023, Dr Chee L Khoo

It’s not really an article you want to read at the eve of a major event. I am off to Paris this week for my second overseas marathon. My cardiologist thinks I am medically crazy to do a marathon at all. So far, I have kept up my side of the bargain by keeping my heart rate to the recommended maximal heart rate during my training (and mostly during the events).…