Publications by authors named "Rumancik W"

Patients suspected of having derangement of solitus asymmetry should be evaluated individually to determine abdominal visceral and vascular arrangement and to investigate associated problems. This evaluation should begin with plain films to assess cardiac and gastric positions and pulmonary vascularity. Assessment of the bronchial branching patterns should be attempted in all cases.

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A prospective study was conducted on 50 consecutive patients with stage I endometrial cancer who had primary surgical treatment. The purpose of the study was to assess the value of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for accurate staging of early disease and determination of myometrial invasion. Features identified by MRI were correlated with surgical pathology.

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A right adrenal gland mass was found during sonographic examination of the right upper quadrant during a workup for hyperemesis gravidarum. Magnetic resonance imaging was used to clarify the origin of the mass. The tumor was nonfunctional.

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During a 12-month period, 64 patients were operated on for primary hyperparathyroidism. Sixty-one had single adenomas and 3 had double adenomas. Preoperative imaging was used to localize the adenomas.

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A prospective multiinstitutional study was performed to compare the ability of dynamic sequential contrast material-enhanced computed tomography (CT), delayed contrast material-enhanced CT, and two T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) sequences (spin echo and inversion recovery) to demonstrate metastatic disease in the liver and abdomen in patients with cancer. All four techniques had comparable rates of hepatic lesion detection when compared individually or when the combined CT techniques were compared with the combined MR techniques. The sensitivity to hepatic disease was 96% (27 of 28 patients) for the combined MR techniques versus 93% (26 of 28 patients) for the combined CT techniques.

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Over an 18-month period, 11 adults with congenital pulmonary anomalies within the sequestration spectrum, identified either surgically or radiographically by CT and/or angiography, were evaluated with MR. These included seven patients with bronchogenic cysts, two with intralobar pulmonary sequestrations, one with scimitar syndrome, and one with bronchial atresia. In each case, MR showed at least some findings indicative of the correct diagnosis.

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Magnetic resonance phase images are derived from conventional spin-echo (SE) pulse sequences and display properties of proton movement that occurs with blood flow. SE magnitude and phase images were obtained and retrospectively evaluated in 21 patients referred for potential cardiovascular abnormalities in which intracardiac or intravascular signal was detected. Abnormalities included intravascular and intracardiac thrombus, aneurysm, aortic dissection, flow alteration, atherosclerotic disease, and congenital cardiac anomaly.

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MAgnetic resonance (MR) imaging was performed in 14 patients with intracavitary cardiac tumors diagnosed by echocardiography. Except in the patients whose echocardiograms were diagnostic of atrial myxomas, this modality contributed important additional anatomic information regarding the tumor's relationship to the normal intracardiac structures and/or its extension to the adjacent vascular and mediastinal structures. The MR findings correlated extremely well with the findings in all 12 patients who underwent surgical exploration or postmortem examination, and in the other two patients, MR guided the decision to obtain transvenous biopsy samples of their right heart masses.

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Magnetic resonance imaging utilizing spin echo sequences was used to demonstrate cor triatriatum in an 18-year-old boy. Phase map images aided the diagnosis by demonstrating the presence of slowly flowing blood in the accessory atrial chamber. Magnetic resonance is an excellent modality for the noninvasive diagnosis of cor triatriatum.

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This report documents the use of magnetic resonance (MR) in evaluation of intralobar pulmonary sequestration. Because of its distinctive multiplanar capabilities and nonreliance on contrast media to visualize blood vessels, MR can be used to define and characterize the size and course of anomalous arterial feeding vessels. Furthermore, MR can be of value in detecting the presence of mucoid-impacted bronchi within abnormal segments of the lung.

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Sonographic images of the vocal cords were obtained in 41 healthy human subjects using a phased array realtime ultrasound scanner. The thyroid cartilage provides the acoustic window for sonographic visualization of the vocal cords. The false vocal cords appear as hyperechoic structures, while the true vocal cords are seen as hypoechoic structures.

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Prostatic abscess appears on computed tomography (CT) as multiple, well-demarcated fluid collections within the prostate gland and/or periprostatic tissues. Since prostatic abscess may not be differentiated from other prostatic disease on the basis of history and physical examination alone, CT can contribute significantly to establishing this diagnosis. Prostatic abscess can be an aggressive lesion within the pelvis and may rupture into the urethra, peritoneum, prevesical space, rectum, perineum, and ischiorectal fossa.

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Seven patients with one or more pancreatic masses due to metastases to the pancreatic parenchyma were studied by CT. Two patterns were observed. Three patients had multiple nodules studding the pancreatic surface.

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Fibrobullous disease of the upper lobes of the lungs is a rare extraskeletal manifestation of ankylosing spondylitis, occurring in 1.3% of patients with ankylosing spondylitis. We present a patient with this disease, and discuss this pulmonary manifestation.

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The correlation between serum ionized calcium (Ca++) levels and three ECG QT intervals (Q-OTC, Q-ATC, and Q-ETC) was assessed in 20 adult patients. The relationship between each QT interval and Ca++ level, based on 209 Ca++ determinations through a range of 1.0 to 4.

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