ABSTRACT
Hip pain can have multiple causes, including intra-articular, juxta-articular, and referred pain, mainly from spine or sacroiliac joints. In this review, we discuss the causes of intra-articular hip pain from childhood to adulthood and the role of the appropriate imaging techniques according to clinical suspicion and age of the patient. Stress is put on the findings of radiographs, currently considered the first imaging technique, not only in older people with degenerative disease but also in young people without osteoarthritis. In this case plain radiography allows categorization of the hip as normal or dysplastic or with impingement signs, pincer, cam, or a combination of both.
ABSTRACT
PURPOSE: The follow-up of treated low-grade glioma (LGG) requires the evaluation of subtle clinical changes and MRI results. When the result is inconclusive, additional procedures are required to assist decision-making, such as the use of advanced MRI (aMRI) sequences and nuclear medicine scans (SPECT and PET). The aim of this study was to determine whether incorporating (18)F-fluorocholine PET/CT in the follow-up protocol for treated LGG improves diagnostic accuracy and clinical utility. METHODS: This was a prospective case-series study in patients with treated LGG during standard follow-up with indeterminate clinical and/or radiological findings of tumour activity. All patients underwent clinical evaluation, aMRI, (201)Tl-SPECT and (18)F-fluorocholine PET/CT. Images were interpreted by visual evaluation complemented with semiquantitative analysis. RESULTS: Between January 2012 and December 2013, 18 patients were included in this study. The final diagnosis was established by histology (five surgical specimens, one biopsy specimen) or by consensus of the Neuro-Oncology Group (11 patients) after a follow-up of >6 months (mean 14.9 ± 2.72 months). The global diagnostic accuracies were 90.9% for aMRI (38.8% inconclusive), 69.2 % for (201)Tl-SPECT (11.1% inconclusive), and 100% for (18)F-fluorocholine PET/CT. (201)Tl-SPECT led correctly to a change in the initial approach in 38.9% of patients but might have led to error in 27.8%. The use of (18)F-fluorocholine PET/CT alone rather than (201)Tl-SPECT led correctly to a change in the approach suggested by routine follow-up in 72.2% of patients and endorsed the approach in the remaining 27.8%. CONCLUSION: Our results support the need to complement structural MRI with aMRI and nuclear medicine procedures in selected patients. (18)F-Fluorocholine PET/CT can be useful in the individualized management of patients with treated LGG with uncertain clinical and/or radiological evidence of tumour activity.
Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Choline/analogs & derivatives , Glioma/diagnostic imaging , Positron-Emission Tomography , Radiopharmaceuticals , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Multimodal Imaging , Thallium , Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon , Tomography, X-Ray ComputedABSTRACT
Los tumores malignos primarios del corazón son una patología muy poco frecuente y de ellos, el tipo más frecuente es el angiosarcoma cardíaco. Esta patología tiene una clínica muy inespecífica y puede ser muy difícil de diagnosticar por técnicas convencionales de imagen. Presentamos el caso de un paciente con un angiosarcoma cardíaco que además presentaba una complicación muy poco frecuente, una rotura cardíaca, lo que hizo necesario el uso de la 18F-FDG PET-TC para demostrar la malignidad de la masa y poder llegar a un diagnóstico definitivo (AU)
Primary malignant tumors of the heart are a rare condition. The most common type is the cardiac angiosarcoma. he symptoms of this disease are very nonspecific and can be very difficult to diagnose by conventional imaging techniques. We report the case of a male patient with cardiac angiosarcoma who also had a rare complication, this being cardiac rupture, which required the use of 18F-FDG PET-CT to demonstrate the mass malignancy and to reach a definitive diagnosis (AU)
Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Adult , Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 , Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography/methods , Hemangiosarcoma , Heart Neoplasms , Heart Rupture , Magnetic Resonance ImagingABSTRACT
The aim of this review is to compare the effectiveness of percutaneous vertebroplasty and kyphoplasty to treat pain and improve functional outcome from vertebral fractures secondary to osteoporosis and tumor conditions. In 2009, two open randomized controlled trials published in the New England Journal of Medicine questioned the value of vertebroplasty in treating vertebral compression fractures. Nevertheless, the practice of physicians treating these conditions has barely changed. The objective of this review is to try to clarify the most important issues, based on our own experience and the reported evidence about both techniques, and to guide towards the most appropriate choice of treatment of vertebral fractures, although many questions still remain unanswered.
ABSTRACT
Primary malignant tumors of the heart are a rare condition. The most common type is the cardiac angiosarcoma. The symptoms of this disease are very nonspecific and can be very difficult to diagnose by conventional imaging techniques. We report the case of a male patient with cardiac angiosarcoma who also had a rare complication, this being cardiac rupture, which required the use of (18)F-FDG PET-CT to demonstrate the mass malignancy and to reach a definitive diagnosis.