Publications by authors named "Wandtke J"

Unlabelled: Non-malignant oesophageal diseases are critical to recognize, but can be easily overlooked or misdiagnosed radiologically. In this paper, we cover the salient clinical features and imaging findings of non-malignant pathology of the oesophagus. We organize the many non-malignant diseases of the oesophagus into two major categories: luminal disorders and wall disorders.

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The large airways can be affected by a wide spectrum of acquired benign and malignant diseases. These lesions may present as focal or diffuse processes and with narrowing or widening of the airway. Some of these may be asymptomatic for quite some time and may be incidentally detected on imaging, while others may be symptomatic, causing airway compromise.

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Background: Pulmonary arteries are not just affected by thrombus. Congenital and acquired conditions can also involve the pulmonary arteries. An awareness of these conditions is important for the radiologist interpreting chest computed tomography (CT).

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Malignant solitary fibrous tumor (MSFT) is a rare neoplasm. Three cases of MSFT with unusual features, including 1 pleural and 2 extrapleural, are reported. A 64-year-old woman with a large right thoracic MSFT and episodes of severe hypoglycemia experienced resolution of her hypoglycemia immediately after resection of the MSFT.

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Aims: Uncommon cases of lung metastasis from different types of uterine neoplasms with a long tumour-free interval after hysterectomy are reported.

Methods And Results: Four cases were retrieved from our surgical pathology archives. Case 1 was a 68-year-old woman who had three pulmonary nodules 23 years after hysterectomy for low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma (LGESS).

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Fat embolism is a common complication of pelvic and long bone fractures. Macroscopic fat emboli in the pulmonary arteries on computed tomography have been reported postoperatively after fixation of long bone fractures for trauma, however the quantification of attenuation values of fat emboli have been infrequently reported in the literature. We present a case of pulmonary fat embolism in a 52-year-old female after acute bony trauma sustained during a motor vehicle accident.

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Objective: The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence and appearance of the pericardial sinuses and recesses on thin-section (2.5- or 3-mm) CT scans compared with thick-section (5- or 7-mm) CT scans.

Materials And Methods: Nine hundred forty-one consecutive contrast-enhanced chest CT scans were retrospectively evaluated.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to evaluate how common and significant enlarged nonpalpable supraclavicular lymph nodes are in patients newly diagnosed with lung cancer using chest CT and ultrasound.
  • Out of 55 patients, 40% were found to have abnormalities in their supraclavicular lymph nodes, with most of these being malignant and detectable via CT.
  • The research concluded that using chest CT accompanied by ultrasound-guided biopsy is an effective, safe way to diagnose lung cancer and determine if the tumor can be surgically removed.
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The Medical Information, Communication and Archive System (MICAS) is a multivendor incremental approach to picture archiving and communications system (PACS). It is a multimodality integrated image management system that is seamlessly integrated with the radiology information system (RIS). Phase II enhancements of MICAS include a permanent archive, automated workflow, study caches, Microsoft (Redmond, WA) Windows NT diagnostic workstations with all components adhering to Digital Information Communications in Medicine (DICOM) standards.

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The long-term (10 years) multimodality distributed phased archive for the Medical Information, Communication and Archive System (MICAS) is being implemented in three phases. The selection process took approximately 10 months. Based on the mandatory archive attributes and desirable features, Cemax-Icon (Fremont, CA) was selected as the vendor.

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Objective: The purpose of our study was to evaluate chest radiographic features of nontraumatic mediastinal hemorrhage occurring after extrapericardial thoracic aorta rupture.

Materials And Methods: Twenty-seven consecutive chest radiographs obtained at admission of patients with hemorrhage from ruptured thoracic aorta aneurysms, aortic dissections, or penetrating aortic ulcers were randomized with radiographs of 23 subjects with nonruptured thoracic aorta aneurysms, 20 subjects with nonruptured dissections, and 20 control subjects. Diagnoses were established by interpreting CT scans, MR images, and findings at surgery or autopsy or both.

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Bedside chest radiography is one of the most frequently performed radiologic examinations, yet it is the examination with the most variation in image quality. The need to improve the quality of this examination has long been recognized, but it is a difficult problem to solve. Critically ill patients must undergo bedside chest radiography almost daily.

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Use of scan equalization radiography (SER) for imaging bone in the head, face, neck, and shoulder was evaluated in a clinical comparison study with conventional radiographs of randomly selected patients. Two hundred nine pairs of normal and abnormal SER images and conventional radiographs were compared by four radiologists in a side-by-side viewing situation. The radiologists compared the visibility of specific anatomic features and rated the SER images as better than, equal to, or worse than the conventional radiographs.

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In recent years the application of computers to chest radiography has resulted in a wide variety of innovative research. Major research efforts have resulted in the development of new types of x-ray detectors, such as storage phosphor technology, for use with computers. Storage phosphor imaging is one of the most promising new techniques, and almost 100 systems have been installed worldwide.

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A clinical comparison study of scanning equalization radiography (SER) and conventional chest radiography was performed with the latest prototype SER system. Conventional chest radiography was performed at 120 kVp with Lanex regular screens (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY) and Kodak Ortho-G or Ortho-C film (Eastman Kodak). The 253 volunteer patients were examined with both techniques.

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In nine anesthetized dogs, accuracy of noninvasive measurements of lung weight (W) and gas volume in vivo was determined from volume and density determined by computed tomography (CT) and by rebreathing helium and the soluble gases dimethyl ether (WDME) and acetylene (WC2H2). Reference standards were obtained from the postmortem scale weight of the frozen lungs (Wscale) and compared with the CT lung weights measured in the living dog (WCT-38) and the frozen carcass (WCT-cold). WCT-cold did not significantly differ from Wscale [-2 +/- 9% (SD), P = 0.

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The potential for improved pulmonary nodule detection with scanning equalization radiography (SER) was evaluated by means of observer performance testing during the interpretation of posteroanterior conventional radiographs and SER images of an anthropomorphic chest phantom with simulated nodules. A test set of 200 conventional and 200 SER radiographs of phantoms containing either one nodule or none was interpreted by four radiologists attempting to detect a nodule and indicate a confidence value. Their ability to detect nodules positioned over the lung was slightly improved with SER compared with conventional radiography (sensitivity, .

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A computer program that recognizes potential pulmonary nodules in PA chest radiographs has been developed. This program produces a display of candidate nodules that require interpretation by a radiologist. Some false positives are rejected by a program, the Nodule Expert.

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To determine if computed tomography (CT) can accurately measure lung volume, we compared lung gas volume measured by helium dilution with the equivalent volume calculated from CT total lung volume and density in 13 supine dogs. CT lung gas volume underestimated helium volume by 34% (range: -63 to 0%). Studies of wooden lung phantoms varying in density from 0.

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The conventional chest radiograph has a number of limitations as a diagnostic method of evaluating chest disease. The wide variation in attenuation between the lung and mediastinum frequently results in images with low contrast over the thicker portions. This, coupled with the presence of intense body-scattered radiation that must be adequately removed, makes chest radiography one of the most challenging diagnostic procedures in conventional radiography.

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