Background: Posterior synostotic plagiocephaly (PSP) impacts craniofacial skeleton. Study quantifies facial changes in children with PSP to investigate the impact of age and PSP severity at diagnosis on the facial dysmorphology.
Material And Methods: High-resolution preoperative CT images of 22 infants with PSP were analyzed.
This study aims to evaluate in extremely premature infants the severity of brain structural injury causing total absence or near-total absence of cerebellar hemispheres by using MRI visual and volumetric scoring systems. It also aims to assess the role of the score systems in predicting motor outcome. We developed qualitative and quantitative MRI scoring systems to grade the overall brain damage severity in 16 infants with total absence or near-total absence of cerebellar hemispheres.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMRI plays a key role in the evaluation of post-treatment changes, both in the immediate post-operative period and during follow-up. There are many different treatment's lines and many different neuroradiological findings according to the treatment chosen and the clinical timepoint at which MRI is performed. Structural MRI is often insufficient to correctly interpret and define treatment-related changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: We performed a retrospective qualitative and quantitative evaluation of the sutural changes during the physiological growth to define the age-related ossification stages of major and minor skull sutures or synchondroses.
Methods: A total of 390 healthy subjects, examined for cranio-facial trauma and whose CT scans turned out to be normal, were clustered into homogenous age-matched groups ranged from birth to 90 years. High-resolution CT was used to assess the degree of sutural closure according to a 3-grade scoring system, the sutural pattern, the width, and the density of the gap calculated as the average of two or three ROIs along each suture/synchondrosis.
Acute pancreatitis is one of the most commonly encountered etiologies in the emergency setting, with a broad spectrum of findings that varies in severity from mild interstitial pancreas to severe forms with significant local and systemic complications that are associated with a substantial degree of morbidity and mortality. In this article the radiological aspect of the terminology and classification of acute pancreatitis are reviewed. The roles of ultrasound, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging in the diagnosis and evaluation of acute pancreatitis and its complications are discussed.
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