ABSTRACT
Purpose@#To evaluate the feasibility of pediatric low-dose facial CT reconstructed with filtered back projection (FBP) using adequate kernels. @*Materials and Methods@#We retrospectively reviewed the clinical and imaging data of children aged 0.05). Group A showed a 76.9% reduction in radiation dose compared to Group B (3.2 ± 0.2 mGy vs. 81.9 ± 11.1 mGy; p < 0.001). @*Conclusion@#The addition of a soft tissue kernel image to conventional CT reconstructed with FBP enables the use of pediatric low-dose facial CT protocol while maintaining image quality.
ABSTRACT
We report a rare case of a patient who presented with pathological splenic rupture as the initial manifestation of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and was treated successfully by transcatheter arterial embolization. A 36-year-old man presented to the emergency department with a 1-day history of abdominal pain. Computed tomography showed gross hemoperitoneum with marked splenomegaly, with suspected focal rupture at the lower portion of the spleen and the extravasation of contrast material indicating active bleeding. Given the patient's hemodynamic stability, he was treated with partial splenic embolization by an interventional radiologist, and transfused with red blood cells. Examination of a bone marrow aspiration and biopsy led to a diagnosis of chronic phase CML. He was discharged from the hospital on day 13 post-embolization. Transcatheter arterial embolization should be considered as the initial treatment of spontaneous splenic rupture, especially in patients with hematological malignancies.
Subject(s)
Adult , Humans , Abdominal Pain , Biopsy , Bone Marrow , Diagnosis , Embolization, Therapeutic , Emergency Service, Hospital , Erythrocytes , Hematologic Neoplasms , Hemodynamics , Hemoperitoneum , Hemorrhage , Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive , Rupture , Spleen , Splenic Rupture , SplenomegalyABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: There has been little data reporting the usefulness of intensivist-performed bedside drainage of pleural effusion via ultrasound (US)-guided pigtail catheter. The objective of this study is to clarify the usefulness and safety of these methods in comparison with radiologist-performed procedures. METHODS: Data of patients with pleural effusion treated with US-guided pigtail catheter drainage were analyzed. All procedures were performed from September 2012 to September. 2013 by a well-trained intensivist or radiologist. RESULTS: Pleural effusion was drained in 25 patients in 33 sessions. A radiologist performed 21 sessions, and an intensivist performed 12 sessions. Procedures during mechanical ventilation were performed in 15 (71.4%) patients by a radiologist and in 10 (83.3%) by an intensivist (p = 0.678). The success rate was not significantly different in radiologist- and intensivist-performed procedures, 95.2% (20/21) and 83.3% (10/12), respectively (p = 0.538). The average duration for procedures (including in-hospital transfer) was longer in radiologist-performed cases (p = 0.001). Although the results are limited because of the small population size, aggravation of oxygenation, CO2 retention, and decrease of mean arterial blood pressure were not statistically different in the groups. Pigtail-associated complications including hemothorax, pneumothorax, hepatic perforation, empyema, kink in the catheter, and subcutaneous hematoma were not found. CONCLUSIONS: Intensivist-performed bedside drainage of pleural effusion via ultrasound (US)-guided pigtail catheter is useful and safe and may be recommended in some patients in an intensive care unit.
Subject(s)
Humans , Arterial Pressure , Catheters , Drainage , Empyema , Hematoma , Hemothorax , Intensive Care Units , Oxygen , Pleural Effusion , Pneumothorax , Population Density , Research Design , Respiration, Artificial , UltrasonographyABSTRACT
A 67-year-old woman presented with memory impairment and behavioral changes. Brain MRI indicated hepatic encephalopathy. Abdominal CT scans revealed an intrahepatic portosystemic venous shunt that consisted of two shunt tracts to the aneurysmal sac that communicated directly with the right hepatic vein. The large tract was successfully occluded by embolization using the newly available AMPLATZERTM Vascular Plug II and the small tract was occluded by using coils. The patient's symptoms disappeared after shunt closure and she remained free of recurrence at the 3-month follow-up evaluation.
Subject(s)
Aged , Female , Humans , Embolization, Therapeutic/instrumentation , Hepatic Encephalopathy/etiology , Hepatic Veins/abnormalities , Liver Circulation , Portal Vein/abnormalities , Septal Occluder DeviceABSTRACT
PURPOSE: To assess the safety and usefulness of ultrasonography-guided transthoracic cutting biopsy for lung lesions. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eighty-eight patients (66 men, 22 women, mean age 59 years) with lung lesions underwent an ultrasonography(USG)-guided transthoracic cutting biopsy. The final diagnosis was based on the findings of surgery and clinical and radiological follow-ups. The histopathologic results and diagnostic accuracy of cutting biopsy were determined. Also, the complication rate was statistically evaluated according to the mass size, number of biopsies, and the presence or absence of pleural effusion. RESULTS: Biopsy specimens were successfully obtained in all patients. 79 of 88 lesions (89.8%) were established by histopathology. The final diagnosis was malignant in 58 and benign in 28. The remaining 2 patients were lost to follow-up. Diagnostic sensitivity for malignant lesions was 89.6% (52/58) and that for benign lesions was 96.4% (27/28). Procedure-related complications occurred in 9 patients (10.2%) including pneumothorax (n = 2) and hemoptysis (n = 7). And there was no significant difference according to mass size, number of biopsies, or presence of pleural effusion. CONCLUSION: USG-guided transthoracic cutting biopsy is a useful and safe method for technically-feasible lung lesions.
Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Male , Biopsy , Follow-Up Studies , Hemoptysis , Lost to Follow-Up , Lung , Pneumothorax , Radiography, InterventionalABSTRACT
Metaplastic carcinoma of the breast is rare. We report a case in a 53-year-old woman who presented with a rapidly-growing breast mass. The lesion had a complex echogenicity in ultrasonography and a high signal intensity in a T2-weighted image with rim enhancement in contrast-enhanced MR images. The PET/CT images showed high uptake for the lesion. The lesion was biopsied and found to be a metaplastic carcinoma with an adenomyoepithelioma component. Although metaplstic carcinoma was difficult to differentiate from other common breast cancers, it showed complex echogenicity on ultrasonography and high signal intensity on a T2 weighted image with rim enhancement on contrast-enhanced MR images.
Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Adenomyoepithelioma , BreastABSTRACT
Sclerosing adenosis is a benign proliferating disease which arises from a terminal ductolobular unit in the breasts. When sclerosing adenosis combines to form a mass, it is called an adenosis tumor. There are few reports about mammography, ultrasonography, and MRI findings of adenosis tumors. Also, reports on adenosis tumors until now were based on a single mass. This report is about imaging findings of scleoring adenosis showing bilateral multiple masses in breasts which have never been reported.
Subject(s)
Breast , Breast Neoplasms , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , MammographyABSTRACT
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to assess the usefulness of Doppler parameters in transplanted kidney function. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Doppler parameters, including resistive index (RI), pulsatility index (PI), peak systolic velocity (PSV), and end diastolic velocity (EDV) were measured in the interlobar artery of 55 transplant recipients. Patients were grouped according to glomerular filtration rate (GFR): Group A (GFR or = 30 ml / min / 1.73 m2, n = 28). Doppler parameters were compared between groups and correlated with the GFR. RESULTS: GFR (40.1 +/- 26.9) showed a significant negative correlation with RI (0.69 +/- .08) (p = .002, r = -.414). RI (0.72 vs. 0.67), PI (1.42 vs. 1.23), and EDV (10.5 vs. 15.3) differed significantly between groups (p < .05), however, PSV was not (36.9 vs. 47.1). Patients in group A (n = 11) with a lower RI than the mean had significantly lower PSV (31.7 vs. 45.1; p = .027) and EDV (11.1 vs. 16.7; p = .017), compared with such patients in group B (n = 21). CONCLUSIONS: Doppler parameters are useful for evaluation of function of transplanted kidney. Even if the RI is normal, PSV and EDV may be used as hemodynamic indicators.
Subject(s)
Humans , Arteries , Glomerular Filtration Rate , Hemodynamics , Kidney , Kidney Transplantation , TransplantsABSTRACT
PURPOSE: To design and develop a World Wide Web-based education program that will allow trainees to interactively learn and improve the diagnostic capability of detecting pulmonary nodules on chest radiographs. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Chest radiographs with known diagnosis were retrieved and selected from our institutional clinical archives. A database was constructed by sorting radiographs into three groups: normal, nodule, and false positive (i.e., nodule-like focal opacity). Each nodule was assigned with the degree of detectability: easy, intermediate, difficult, and likely missed. Nodules were characterized by their morphology (well-defined, ill-defined, irregular, faint) and by other associated pathologies or potentially obscuring structures. The Web site was organized into four sections: study, test, record and information. RESULTS: The Web site allowed a user interactively to undergo the training section appropriate to the user's diagnostic capability. The training was enhanced by means of clinical and other pertinent radiological findings included in the database. The outcome of the training was tested with clinical test radiographs that presented nodules or false positives with varying diagnostic difficulties. CONCLUSION: A Word Wide Web-based education program is a promising technique that would allow trainees to interactively learn and improve the diagnostic capability of detecting and characterizing pulmonary nodules.
Subject(s)
Diagnosis , Education , Internet , Pathology , Radiography, Thoracic , ThoraxABSTRACT
PURPOSE: We wanted to examine the usefulness of multi-detector CT (MDCT) with multiplanar reformations for evaluating the location, thickness and the presence or absence of intraluminal gas in the normal appendix of adults. MATERIALS AND METHODS: From December 2004 to June 2005, we evaluated normal appendices in 427 consecutive adult patients who were scanned with 16-slice MDCT. All these patients had no clinical findings of appendicitis. There were 251 men and 176 women. The age range was 19-84 years (mean age: 55 years). The contrast-enhanced MDCT scans during the portal phase were obtained with 0.75 mm detector collimation and they were reviewed with using the multiplanar reconstruction images (3 mm section thickness). The MDCT images of normal appendices on a PACS monitor were retrospectively analyzed. We analyzed the location, thickness and the presence or absence of intraluminal gas by consensus of two abdominal radiologists. The positions of normal appendices were classified as type I (postileal and medial paracecal), type II (subcecal), type III (retrocecal and retrocolic or laterocolic), type IV (preileal and medial colic) and type V (lower pelvic cavity). RESULTS: The five types of appendiceal locations were as follows; type I (n=187; 44%), type II (n=78; 18 %), type III (n=92; 22%), type IV (n=39; 9%) and type V (n=31; 7%). The appendiceal tips in 29 cases (7%) were unusually located in the right subhepatic space, the small bowel mesentery and the right adnexa. The mean thickness of 427 appendices was 5.8+/-0.9 mm (range: 3.8-9.2 mm). The appendiceal mean thickness was 5.9+/-0.9 mm in men and 5.7+/-0.9 mm in women (p < 0.05). 384 (90%) of 427 appendices had intraluminal gas and 43 (10%) had no intraluminal gas, and their mean thickness was 5.9 mm (range: 3.8-9.2 mm) and 5.3 mm (3.8-7.3 mm), respectively (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: MDCT with multiplanar reformations was useful for evaluating the location, thickness and the presence or absence of intraluminal gas in normal appendix of adults. These MDCT findings may be helpful in diagnosing equivocal appendicitis or appendicitis with unusual location.