Patrick J. Oliverio
Johns Hopkins University
8 Papers
51 Citations
Patrick J. Oliverio is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Functional endoscopic sinus surgery & Sinus (anatomy). The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications.
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Papers
•Journal Article
Optimal CT evaluation for functional endoscopic sinus surgery.
TL;DR: The optimal screening CT protocol for the paranasal sinuses is found to be a section thickness of 3 mm, no intersection gap, and a section angle within 10 degrees from the plane perpendicular to the palate.
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Primary craniosynostosis: imaging features.
TL;DR: In this paper, a pictorial essay illustrates the imaging findings, nomenclature, and associated abnormalities of the various types of primary craniosynostosis, and a three-dimensional reconstruction optimally evaluates the presence and degree of sutural involvement and assesses associated facial and intracranial abnormalities.
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Update on imaging for functional endoscopic sinus surgery.
TL;DR: The imaging modalities available for patients being considered for functional endoscopic sinus surgery, as well as postoperative appearances, including complications, are presented.
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Relation between CT Scan Findings and Human Sense of Smell
S C Hong,Donald A. Leopold,Patrick J. Oliverio,Mark L. Benson,D Mellits,S A Quaskey,S J Zinreich +6 more
TL;DR: There is no correlation between smell ability and size of the nasal and sinus structures, and total, not partial, opacity of the left olfactory cleft, frontal recess, or ethmoidal infundibulum was correlated with decreased sense of smell.
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•Journal Article
MR angiography in acute cerebral ischemia of the anterior circulation: A preliminary report
Jonathan H. Gillard,Patrick J. Oliverio,Peter B. Barker,Stephen M. Oppenheimer,Robert 'Nick' Bryan +4 more
TL;DR: MR angiography can show patients with acute cerebral ischemia and major vascular occlusive disease, and of those with partial or complete occlusion, progression of thrombus or spontaneous recanalization occurs infrequently.
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