David H Feiglin, MD
750 East Adams Street
Syracuse, NY 13210
315 464-8668
Current Appointments
- Professor and Chair of Radiology
- Director of Nuclear Medicine
- Division Chief of University Radiology Associates, PET
- Director of University Radiology Associates, Diagnostic Radiology and Ultrasound
- Director of Diagnostic and Therapeutic Nuclear Medicine Clinic
- Director of University Radiology Associates, MRI/CT, Radiology and Angio
- Director of University Radiology Associates, Interventional Radiology
- Director of Diagnostic Radiology/Women's Imaging
Hospital Campus
- Downtown
- Community
Clinical Section Affiliations
- Radiology: Nuclear Medicine
Research Programs and Affiliations
- Radiology
Clinic/Unit
- University Radiology Associates, PET
550 Harrison Center
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100, 550 Harrison Street
Syracuse, NY 13202
315 464-2222
- University Radiology Associates, Diagnostic Radiology and Ultrasound
550 Harrison Center
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550 Harrison Street
Syracuse, NY 13202
315 464-7700
- Diagnostic and Therapeutic Nuclear Medicine Clinic
Upstate University Hospital - Downtown Campus
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309, 750 East Adams Street
Syracuse, NY 13210
315 464-7031
- University Radiology Associates, MRI/CT, Radiology and Angio
550 Harrison Center
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550 Harrison Street
Syracuse, NY 13202
315 464-7711
- University Radiology Associates, Interventional Radiology
550 Harrison Center
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550 Harrison Street
Syracuse, NY 13202
315 464-7715
- Diagnostic Radiology/Women's Imaging
University Health Care Center
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1st Fl., 90 Presidential Plaza
Syracuse, NY 13202
315 464-2778
Education & Fellowships
- Residency: Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Australia, 1972
- MD: University of Melbourne, Australia, 1967
Clinical Interests
Correlation of MR nuclear medicine and echocardiography in measuring cardiac volume and function; Evaluation of advanced non-invasive cardiac functional imagining (MR, PET, Nuclear Medicine); MR imaging of the heart
Research Interests
Application of MR molecular imaging in the evaluation of the heart and breast. Clinical evaluation of radiolabelled monoclonal antibody imaging.
Specialties & Certification
- Nuclear Medicine
- Nuclear Radiology
Diseases & Conditions Treated
- Bone Cancer
- Thyroid Cancer
- Thyroid Disease
Treats
- Adults and Children
Treatments/Services
- Nuclear Imaging
Current Hospital Privileges
- Upstate University Hospital
Research Abstract
Correlative Evaluation of Magnetic Resonance, Nuclear Medicine and Echocardiographic Imaging Modalities in Measurement of Cardiac Volumes and Functional Parameters. With F.D. Thomas, N. Szeverenyi, E. Scalzetti, A. Jaffe, R. Carlson, P. Randall, G. Tillapaugh-Fay, B. Hellwig
This study is to correlate the results of Magnetic Resonance Imaging determination of cardiac chamber volumes and their associated functional parameters, (such as stroke volumes, ventricular filling and contraction rates) with those obtained by routinely utilized clinical Echocardiography and Nuclear Medicine techniques.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging has the ability to acquire cardiac functional data quickly and without any known safety hazard. It thus potentially offers the ability to provide clinical data, specifically with respect to right heart function, that cannot be accurately obtained by the other modalities at the present times. The Magnetic Resonance techniques are exactly the same for evaluation of right and left cardiac chamber function, so that significant correlation with data obtained by echocardiography and nuclear medicine (currently accepted as non-invasive ''gold standards'') in regard to left ventricular function parameters implies that a similar level of clinical accuracy would apply for that of the right ventricle (despite no non-invasive gold standard being available for that structure).
This study aims to show that cardiac MRI in the clinical setting is equally accurate as other non-invasive imaging modalities for left ventricular function and a first line technique for right ventricular functional assessment in this institution.
MRI Evaluation of Maximal Temporal and Spatial Mensurability of Cardiac Chambers and Thoracic Great Vessels: A Comparison of Conventional and Echo-planar Techniques.
The ability to obtain accurate cyclic functional information of the cardiac chambers plays a continuing important clinical diagnostic role in the evaluation and monitoring of patients with a wide range of cardiac pathologies as well as patients with lung disease and patients embarking on and continuing with cardiotoxic chemotherapeutic regimes.
Specifically, functional parameters such as ejection fraction and wall motion characteristics, are an integral part of day to day cardiologic evaluation.
Specific aims:
- Evaluation of conventional (spin and gradient echo) and echo-planar pulse sequences for maximization of MR conspicuity of cardiac chambers and walls, as well as the cardio-thoracic vasculature, including great vessels and coronary vasculature.
- . Mensuration of the atrial and ventricular chamber volume changes during the cardiac cycle in volunteers.
- Measurement of ventricular (left and right) wall mass in normal volunteers.
- MR determination of wall thickening and motion during the cardiac cycle.
- Semiquantitative evaluation of intrachamber flow, valvular flow and great vessel flow (specifically, thoracic aorta and origins of carotid vasculature) characteristics during the cardiac cycle.
Faculty Profile Shortcut: http://www.upstate.edu/faculty/feiglind