Publications by authors named "Adriano Massimiliano Priola"

Objectives: To prospectively evaluate usefulness of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) in differentiating anterior mediastinal lymphoma from nonsuppressing normal thymus on chemical-shift MR, and to look at the relationship between patient age and ADC.

Methods: Seventy-three young subjects (25 men, 48 women; age range, 9-29 years), who underwent chemical-shift MR and diffusion-weighted MR were divided into a normal thymus group (group A, 40 subjects), and a lymphoma group (group B, 33 patients). For group A, all subjects had normal thymus with no suppression on opposed-phase chemical-shift MR.

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Vertebral fractures in beta-thalassemia major are increasingly found because of the longer life expectancy of patients, with a major negative impact on their quality of life. We performed a retrospective cross-sectional study to investigate the prevalence of vertebral deformities in thalassemic patients and to identify their best dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) predictor among trabecular bone score (TBS), bone mineral density (BMD), and Z-score. Eighty-two outpatients with beta-thalassemia major on regular conventional treatment were studied at a single academic center.

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Purpose: To assess intra- and interobserver variability in the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) measurements of pleural abnormalities.

Materials And Methods: Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging was performed in 34 patients to characterize pleural abnormalities, with a 1.5T unit at b values of 0/150/500/800 sec/mm .

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In the post-operative course of the interventions of lung resection for primary tumor, complications of different nature and severity can arise, recognizing different pathogenetic mechanisms and differing according to the type of resection performed and to the time elapsed after surgery. The low diagnostic accuracy of chest radiography requires a thorough knowledge of the radiologist about all radiographic findings, both normal and pathological, which can be found in the immediate post-operative period (within 30 days after surgery). This article aims to describe the incidence, the clinical features and the radiological aspects of immediate complications following pulmonary resections, with specific reference to those in which the diagnostic imaging provides a fundamental contribution.

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Objectives: To investigate inter-reader reproducibility of five different region-of-interest (ROI) protocols for apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) measurements in the anterior mediastinum.

Methods: In eighty-one subjects, on ADC mapping, two readers measured the ADC using five methods of ROI positioning that encompassed the entire tissue (whole tissue volume [WTV], three slices observer-defined [TSOD], single-slice [SS]) or the more restricted areas (one small round ROI [OSR]), multiple small round ROI [MSR]). Inter-observer variability was assessed with interclass correlation coefficient (ICC), coefficient of variation (CoV), and Bland-Altman analysis.

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Purpose: To compare perfusion-free to perfusion-sensitive measurements of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) to diagnose benign conditions from malignancies of the anterior mediastinum.

Materials And Methods: Seventy-six subjects were divided into a "benign conditions" group (A, n = 44) and a "malignancies" group (B, n = 32), based on histological findings. diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) was performed at b of 0/150/800 sec/mm(2) .

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Recently, the use of magnetic resonance (MR) in clinical practice for the evaluation of the anterior mediastinum has considerably increased due to technological improvements and standardization of thoracic protocols. Currently, MR imaging is increasingly seen as a useful problem-solving modality, especially in equivocal cases at computed tomography, with the advantage of a higher contrast resolution and no radiation exposure. Chemical shift and diffusion-weighted MR are helpful in tissue characterization and present advantages over conventional MR imaging, first in providing quantitative data, without the need for the administration of contrast medium.

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Objectives: To evaluate the usefulness of diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance for distinguishing thymomas according to WHO and Masaoka-Koga classifications and in predicting disease-free survival (DFS) by using the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC).

Methods: Forty-one patients were grouped based on WHO (low-risk vs. high-risk) and Masaoka-Koga (early vs.

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Aim: Nephrocalcinosis is a clinical-pathological entity characterized by the deposition of calcium salts within the kidney parenchyma. Both the protean presentation and multiple causes may explain the lack of data regarding its prevalence. The aim of this study is to report the prevalence and main clinical features of nephrocalcinosis diagnosed in a newly opened nephrology outpatient unit.

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Thymoma is the most common primary neoplasm of the anterior mediastinum. At diagnosis, up to 40% of patients present with advanced disease. Because advanced thymomas receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy, diagnostic imaging is crucial to plan the correct treatment.

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Rebound thymic hyperplasia (RTH) generally retains the quadrilateral or triangular shape typical of the normal thymus. Nevertheless, RTH may rarely appear as a focal mass, a condition that mimics tumors if reveals soft tissue attenuation at computed tomography (CT). In such cases, chemical-shift magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can demonstrate microscopic fat within tissue, that would be indistinct at CT, by showing signal suppression on opposed-phase images relative to in-phase images, although two cases of nonsuppressing thymus have been described in early adulthood, both of them with minimally fat amount at histology, but none with RTH.

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Objectives: The objective of this study was to prospectively investigate the usefulness of chemical-shift and diffusion-weighted (DW) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with myasthenia gravis (MG) for distinguishing thymic lymphoid hyperplasia (TLH), normal thymus (NT), and thymoma (THY) by using the signal intensity index (SII) and the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC).

Materials And Methods: We examined 87 subjects (44 males, 43 females; range, 15-71 years) with generalized MG and antibodies to the acetylcholine receptor seropositivity who underwent surgery. They were divided into a TLH/NT group (A, 64 patients; TLH, 49; NT, 15) and a THY group (B, 24 patients; nonadvanced THY, 15; advanced THY, 9) on the basis of histological findings.

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Lymphoproliferative disorders of the anterior mediastinum may involve the thymus or lymph nodes as part of disseminated disease or as an isolated site. Imaging is crucial in managing patients with mediastinal lymphoma and is employed in pretreatment assessment, midtreatment evaluation of response, posttreatment restaging, and surveillance during follow-up. For decades, computed tomography (CT) has been the standard imaging technique, although in the last years, positron emission tomography (PET)-CT and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have been introduced.

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Hydrostatic pulmonary edema is as an abnormal increase in extravascular water secondary to elevated pressure in the pulmonary circulation, due to congestive heart failure or intravascular volume overload. Diagnosis of hydrostatic pulmonary edema is usually based on clinical signs associated to conventional radiography findings. Interpretation of radiologic signs of cardiogenic pulmonary edema are often questionable and subject.

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Rebound thymic hyperplasia (RTH) with increased (18)F-FGD uptake at positron emission tomography (PET) computed tomography (CT) is typical of pediatric patients after chemotherapy, although it may occasionally occur in adults. At CT, RTH usually appears as a diffusely enlarged thymus with areas of fatty attenuation. We report two cases of RTH in adults detected at follow-up: both showed unusual morphology on CT and were confirmed at PET-CT as areas of strongly increased radiopharmaceutical uptake, which suggested disease recurrence.

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