Objective: In this retrospective non-randomized cohort study, the image quality and radiation dose were compared between prospectively electrocardiogram (ECG)-gated axial (PGA) and retrospectively ECG-gated helical (RGH) techniques for the assessment of coronary artery bypass grafts using 256-slice CT.
Methods: We studied 124 grafts with 577 segments in 64 patients with a heart rate (HR) <85 bpm who underwent CT coronary angiography (CTCA); 34 patients with RGH-CTCA and 30 patients with PGA-CTCA. The image quality of the bypass grafts was assessed by a 5-point scale (1 = excellent to 5 = non-diagnostic) for each segment (proximal anastomosis, proximal, middle, distal course of graft body, and distal anastomosis).
We report a case of completely isolated enteric duplication in an 18-month-old boy in whom US revealed a reniform abdominal mass with a pseudokidney sign that had no connection to adjacent organs. Distinctive histopathological changes of the duplication account for these unusual imaging features. Our case represents a diagnostic challenge in this rare entity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIatrogenic bowel injury is a recognized complication of percutaneous suprapubic cystostomy. In the present report, we report an unusual case of small bowel perforation caused by a misplacement of suprapubic catheter into terminal ileum. For safe placement of a suprapubic catheter, the patients must have an adequately distended bladder and be placed in Trendelenburg position that allows safe extraperitoneal puncture of the bladder.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRetained surgical sponge or gossypiboma in the abdominal cavity is an infrequent but serious surgical complication that may lead to medicolegal problem. The incidence of a surgical sponge retained at operation is difficult to estimate, but it has been reported as 1 in 100 to 3000 for all surgical interventions and 1 in 1000 to 1500 for intraabdominal operations. The natural evolution of a retained sponge, if aseptic, is to cause a foreign body reaction, followed by organization to form a foreign body granuloma, which may mimic a soft tissue neoplasm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: We sought to assess the relative contribution of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), maximum intensity projection (MIP), and source images of three-dimensional (3D) time-of-flight (TOF) magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) to the diagnosis of indirect (dural) carotid-cavernous sinus fistulas (CCFs).
Methods: MRI and 3D TOF MRA were obtained in eight consecutive patients with indirect CCFs confirmed by conventional catheter angiography. Two radiologists masked to the angiographic results reviewed images retrospectively to evaluate the efficacy of MRI and 3D TOF MRA source and MIP images in the diagnosis of CCF.
The most commonly involved sites of cryptococcosis are the lungs and the central nervous system. Cryptococcal osteomyelitis is a rare complication of disseminated cryptococcosis, and the vertebraes are the most common site of this infection. The most common underlying disease is sarcoidosis, followed by tuberculosis and previous steroid therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study was undertaken to delineate tracheobronchial anomalies associated with congenital heart disease. From June 1995 to December 2000, 1,245 children with congenital heart disease underwent cardiac electron beam computed tomography with 3-dimensional reconstruction on an independent workstation. Tracheobronchial anomalies are strongly associated with congenital heart disease and accompanying tracheal stenosis is not uncommon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Spinal cord injury in adult men may result in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis dysfunction. Atrophy of adrenal glands was speculated in these patients. This study was undertaken to clarify the functional-anatomic correlation between adrenal volume and body surface area in subjects with spinal cord injury with impaired adrenal reserve.
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