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1.
Journal of Korean Medical Science ; : 1399-1402, 2013.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-44041

ABSTRACT

Sarcoidosis is a systemic granulomatous disease of unknown etiology that involves many organs, occasionally mimicking malignancy. We herein report a 50-yr-old woman of muscular sarcoidosis of chronic myopathic type, manifested by hypercalcemia and muscle wasting. Besides insignificant hilar lymphadenopathy, her sarcoidosis was confined to generalized atrophic muscles and therefore, F-18 FDG PET/CT alone among conventional imaging studies provided diagnostic clues for the non-parathyroid-related hypercalcemia. On follow-up PET/CT during low-dose steroid treatment, FDG uptake in the muscles disappeared whereas that in the hilar lymph nodes remained. PET/CT may be useful in the evaluation of unexpected disease extent and monitoring treatment response in suspected or known sarcoidosis patients.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 , Hypercalcemia/complications , Kidney Calculi/complications , Lymph Nodes/diagnostic imaging , Positron-Emission Tomography , Radiopharmaceuticals , Sarcoidosis/complications , Steroids/therapeutic use , Tomography, X-Ray Computed
2.
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society ; : 233-243, 2005.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-24758

ABSTRACT

The development of MR imaging techniques during the past decade has enabled researchers to use MR imaging as a noninvasive tool for evaluating structural and physiologic states in biologic tissues by measuring the diffusion process of water molecules. More recently, diffusion tensor MR imaging (DTI) technique based on the dependency of molecular diffusion on the orientation of white matter fiber tracts has been used to analyze the trajectory, shape, fiber structure, location, topology and connectivity of neuronal fiber pathways in living humans. Numerous efforts have been made by MR physicists, brain scientists, and medical doctors to advance MR techniques and computer-based algorithms which result in more accurate quantification of diffusion tensor and the generation of white matter fiber tract maps and to determine the pathophysiology of brain disease by DTI and useful clinical applications of DTI. In this article, we describe the tensor theory used to characterize molecular diffusion in white matter and a process of measuring tensor elements using diffusion-sensitive MR images to fiber mapping. We then provide review of current literature and some clinical examples that have been published and are on-going.


Subject(s)
Humans , Brain Diseases , Brain , Diffusion , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Neurons
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