The dacryoscanner is the imaging technique of choice in case of persistent tearing. It allows the opacification of nasolacrimal system, and thus determines the site and the origin of obstruction. The site could be the lacrimal canaliculus, the lacrimal sac, or the nasolacrimal duct.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe use of iodinated contrast agents (IC) has become common practice nowadays in the daily diagnostic and therapeutic procedures in radiology. Immediate hypersensitivity reactions occurring up to the first hour after injection of IC, can be of serious consequences, occasionally leading to death. This justifies the establishment of a prevention algorithm, including a sharp identification of those at risk and the implementation of premedication with corticosteroids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKnowledge of axial anatomy of the different laryngeal structures, identification of the plan of the cords, and relations between the true and false vocal cords is essential for laryngeal surgery where anatomical and radiological correlation is necessary for optimal orientation and guidance. This review constitutes an atlas of axial anatomy of the larynx obtained from a multidetector CT scan, describing the skeletal cartilage, the different folds constituted by laryngeal ligaments covered by mucosa, and the fatty laryngeal spaces. It shows that CT scan and the different reconstructions specifically virtual endoscopy are a valuable adjunct in laryngeal exploration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatric radiology is a specialty that combines the performances of imaging and radio-protection. It also has to deal with absence of cooperation and motion of the child which have limited for a long time many radiological applications. Technical advances with shorter acquisition time in CT and MRI, higher frequencies in ultrasound, and digitalization in conventional radiology have widened the indications especially with the new modalities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOsteoarticular ultrasound, a well established technique in adults, appears to be very useful also in children because of the non ossification of cartilaginous structures, the possibility to avoid sedation and irradiation, and hence the use of scanner and MRI will be reduced. This is a review of the clinical applications of musculoskeletal ultrasound in the pediatric population. Pictorial examples of cases collected between January 2003 and December 2006 of different pathologies encountered in Lebanon are displayed with a discussion of congenital malformations, traumatic lesions, inflammatory and infectious lesions, bone dystrophy and dysplasia, metabolic and tumoral lesions.
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