Niamh Coffey
University of Ottawa
18 Papers
38 Citations
Niamh Coffey is an academic researcher from University of Ottawa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications. Previous affiliations of Niamh Coffey include Ottawa Hospital.
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Papers
Prostatic ductal adenocarcinoma: an aggressive tumour variant unrecognized on T2 weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
TL;DR: DCa resembles Gleason score 6 tumour at T2-weighted MRI, which underestimates tumour grade and renders the tumour occult, and MRI grading may underestimate ductal adenocarcinoma based on increased T2 signal.
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Diagnosing acute aortic syndrome: a Canadian clinical practice guideline
Robert Ohle,Justin W. Yan,Krishan Yadav,Alexis Cournoyer,David W. Savage,Prasad Jetty,Rony Atoui,Bindu Bittira,Brock Wilson,Ashish Gupta,Niamh Coffey,Yvonne Callaway,Jeffrey Middaugh,Dominique R. Ansell,Fraser Rubens,Stephen J. Bignucolo,Terena-Marie Scott,Sarah McIsaac,Eddy Lang +18 more
TL;DR: Acute aortic syndrome is a life-threatening emergency, accounting for 1/2000 presentations of acute chest or back pain to the emergency department.
Multi-parametric (mp) MRI of prostatic ductal adenocarcinoma.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assessed the mp-MRI appearance of Prostatic ductal adenocarcinoma (DCa) as compared with CCa on T2-weighted (T2W) MRI.
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Diffuse pulmonary ossification as a rare cause of interstitial lung disease.
TL;DR: An elderly man who presented with progressive dyspnea on exertion and an isolated reduction in diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide is described, suggesting a lung biopsy is unlikely to be helpful in the management of these patients.
Imaging Findings in Sensorineural Hearing Loss: A Pictorial Essay.
Niamh Coffey,Niamh Coffey,Carlos Torres,Carlos Torres,Rafael Glikstein,Rafael Glikstein,Taleb Al Mansoori,Taleb Al Mansoori,Raquel del Carpio-O'Donovan,Satya Narayana Patro,Satya Narayana Patro +10 more
TL;DR: Both high resolution computed tomography (CT) and gadolinium enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are used in the initial assessment of SNHL although, where available, MRI is commonly used as first-line imaging.
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