Many clinicians order focused computed tomography (CT) examinations for trauma patients based on history and physical examinations. Trauma patients transferred to our level I trauma center undergo an extensive, nonfocused standard trauma CT protocol. We hypothesize that the use of the standard trauma CT protocol does not contribute significant clinical information for patient care when compared with CT examinations based on history and physical examination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To determine if nerve root sleeve diverticula or CSF leakage correlate with post-dural puncture headache (PDPH).
Methods: A total of 781 lumbar and 408 cervical post-myelogram CTs were reviewed using a total diverticulum and leakage (TDL) score: 1, nerve root sleeve diverticulum not beyond the lateral vertebral body; 2, diverticulum beyond the lateral vertebral body; 3, periradicular contrast; 4, epidural contrast medium collection. Two scores at each level (left, right) were added for a total score.
Purpose: To determine if the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) can discriminate benign from malignant peripheral zone (PZ) tissue in patients with biopsy-proven prostate cancer that have undergone endorectal diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) of the prostate.
Materials And Methods: Ten patients with prostate cancer underwent endorectal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in addition to DWI. A two-dimensional grid was placed over the axial images, and each voxel was graded by a 4-point rating scale to discriminate nonmalignant from malignant PZ tissue based on MR images alone.