ABSTRACT
Seven surgically proven cases of a traumatic rupture of the right hemidiaphragm with a hepatic herniation were preoperatively diagnosed by radionuclide liver-spleen imagings, and they were retrospectively analyzed. All injuries resulted from blunt traumatic injury including automobile accidents, and there were associated pelvic and rib fractures in five cases. All patients developed some degree of dyspnea in the relatively immediate phase. All chest radiographs showed an apparent elevation of right hemidiaphragm. Radionuclide liver-spleen imaging with 99mTc sulfur colloid characteristically demonstrated a distortion of liver configuration with superior and posterior displacement of the right lobe. Four patients had a large tear in the central tendon of the right hemidiaphragm, and none had a tear in the anterior part or in left lobe of the liver. The differential diagnosis of elevated right hemidiaphragm is briefly discussed. It is concluded that the correct preoperative diagnosis of the diaphragmatic rupture with liver hernia could be made with an awareness of this condition following trauma and radionuclide liver-spleen imaging.
Subject(s)
Diaphragm/injuries , Hernia, Diaphragmatic, Traumatic/diagnostic imaging , Liver Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/diagnostic imaging , Accidents, Traffic , Adult , Diaphragm/diagnostic imaging , Female , Humans , Liver Diseases/etiology , Male , Radionuclide Imaging , RuptureSubject(s)
Government Agencies , Public Health , Radiation Protection , Radiation Monitoring , United StatesSubject(s)
Wounds, Nonpenetrating/diagnostic imaging , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Brain Injuries/diagnostic imaging , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Fractures, Bone/diagnostic imaging , Heart Injuries/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Kidney/diagnostic imaging , Kidney/injuries , Liver/diagnostic imaging , Liver/injuries , Male , Middle Aged , Radionuclide Imaging , Splenic Rupture/diagnostic imaging , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/complicationsABSTRACT
A varicocele, the most common surgically correctable cause of subfertility in men, is a manifestation of abnormal retrograde venous blood flow through the internal spermatic vein into the peritesticular pampiniform plexus. Methods of diagnosing the varicocele, including careful physical examination using a Valsalva maneuver as well as a Doppler stethoscope, remain somewhat subjective. Venography, while a reliable and objective technique, is invasive and not without morbidity. In the present study, 16 patients with clinically detectable varicoceles of various sizes were studied using a testicular radioisotope angiogram developed in our laboratory. Following the injection of 15 mg. of stannous pyrophosphate which results in tagging of the circulating red cell pool, 20 mCi. of 99m-technetium were administered in an intravenous bolus injection. The isotope binds to the pyrophosphate thus tagging the red blood cells and creating a blood-pooling agent with a relatively short half-life (six hours). Perfusion studies as well as static views of the scrotal contents, both in the supine and erect position, with and without Valsalva maneuver, were obtained using a gamma camera. The activity in each hemiscrotum then was quantitated using a digital computer. It is proposed that quantitation of this differential blood pool will make the identification of even subclinical varicoceles a potentially objective determination.
Subject(s)
Testis/diagnostic imaging , Varicocele/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Male , Methods , Radionuclide Imaging , Scrotum/diagnostic imagingABSTRACT
Radionuclide studies in a renal-transplant patient with congestive heart failure suggested vascular steal from the renal allograft by a contralateral femoral arteriovenous fistula. These reliable, noninvasive diagnostic procedures have potential use in similar settings to evaluate allograft perfusion and function. Correction by removal of the fistula was demonstrated.
Subject(s)
Arteriovenous Shunt, Surgical/adverse effects , Kidney Transplantation , Adult , Female , Femoral Artery , Heart Failure/etiology , Humans , Iliac Artery/diagnostic imaging , Kidney/blood supply , Kidney/diagnostic imaging , Radionuclide Imaging , Regional Blood Flow , Transplantation, HomologousABSTRACT
A septic course suggestive of intra-abdominal abscess followed surgery in a small child with a perforated appendix. Usual diagnostic studies, fluoroscopy, and rectal and wound exploration failed to localized an abscess. The use of gallium 67 scanning accurately localized multiple abscesses which were successfully drained.