Omental torsion is a rare cause of acute abdomen. The diagnosis is usually not established before surgery, but recently some reports have described the usefulness of computed tomography (CT) for the detection of this condition. We encountered a 58-year-old man with torsion of the greater omentum secondary to right-sided inguinal hernia, and present the characteristic CT findings of a whirl-like mass with hyperattenuated fatty tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe encountered unexpected accumulation of thallium-201 in a patient with thalamic dementia resulting from bithalamic venous infarction induced by arteriovenous fistula in the posterior fossa The site and degree of abnormal accumulation varied between early and delayed thallium-201 SPECT images. This unexpected and complicated accumulation of thallium-201 appeared to depend on not only breakdown of the blood-brain barrier but also on the hemodynamics of this type of venous infarction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall bowel obstruction due to lesser sac herniation through both the gastrocolic and gastrohepatic omenta is extremely rare, and only a few reported cases have been concerned with imaging diagnosis. CT images showed distended bowel loops at the level of the cephalad part of the stomach, collapsed triangular loops and attached mesentery were depicted just behind the caudal part of the stomach. These findings provided clues to the diagnosis of this type of lesser sac hernia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF