Purpose: To describe carpet lesions (laterally spreading tumors ≥ 3 cm) detected at computed tomographic (CT) colonography, including their clinical, imaging, and pathologic features.
Materials And Methods: The imaging reports for 9152 consecutive adults undergoing initial CT colonography at a tertiary center were reviewed in this HIPAA-compliant, institutional review board-approved retrospective study to identify all potential carpet lesions detected at CT colonography. Carpet lesions were defined as morphologically flat, laterally spreading tumors 3 cm or larger. For those patients with neoplastic carpet lesions, CT colonography studies were analyzed to determine maximal lesion width and height, oral contrast material coating, segmental location, and computer-aided detection (CAD) findings. Demographic data and details of clinical treatment in these patients were reviewed.
Results: Eighteen carpet lesions in 18 patients (0.2%; mean age, 67.1 years; eight men, 10 women) were identified and were subsequently confirmed at colonoscopy and pathologic examination among 20 potential flat masses (≥3 cm) prospectively identified at CT colonography (there were two nonneoplastic rectal false-positive findings). No additional neoplastic carpet lesions were found in the cohort undergoing colonoscopy after CT colonography and/or surgery (there were no false-negatives). Mean lesion width was 46.5 mm (range, 30-80 mm); mean lesion height was 7.9 mm (range, 4-14 mm). Surface retention of oral contrast material was noted in all 18 cases. All but two lesions were located in the distal rectosigmoid or proximal right colon. At CAD, 17 (94.4%) lesions were detected (mean, 6.2 CAD marks per lesion). Sixteen lesions (88.9%) demonstrated advanced histologic features, including a villous component (n = 11), high-grade dysplasia (n = 4), and invasive cancer (n = 5). Sixteen patients (88.9%) required surgical treatment for complete excision.
Conclusion: CT colonography can effectively depict carpet lesions. Common features in this series included older patient age, rectal or cecal location, surface coating with oral contrast material, multiple CAD hits, advanced yet typically benign histologic features, and surgical treatment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/radiol.13130812 | DOI Listing |
Fungal Syst Evol
December 2024
Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute, P.O. Box 85167, 3508 AD Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Novel species of fungi described in this study include those from various countries as follows: , from accumulated snow sediment sample. , on leaf spots of . , on submerged decaying wood in sea water, on , as endophyte from healthy leaves of .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSkin Appendage Disord
June 2024
Dermatology Department, University Hospital Center Ibn Rochd, Casablanca, Morocco.
Case Rep Gastroenterol
January 2024
Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre, Thunderbay, ON, Canada.
Introduction: Primary appendiceal carcinoma is rare and comprises up to 1% of all colorectal malignancies. Its invasion into adjacent organs, such as the bladder and rectum, especially as a presenting characteristic, is even less common.
Case Presentation: A 75-year-old asymptomatic male tested positive on a screening fecal immunochemical test (FIT).
We describe a case in Australia of human neural larva migrans caused by the ascarid Ophidascaris robertsi, for which Australian carpet pythons are definitive hosts. We made the diagnosis after a live nematode was removed from the brain of a 64-year-old woman who was immunosuppressed for a hypereosinophilic syndrome diagnosed 12 months earlier.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACG Case Rep J
August 2023
Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, MN.
A 52-year-old man with a history of type 1 diabetes mellitus with diabetic nephropathy who underwent simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplant over a decade ago presented with small bowel obstruction and was found by enteroscopy to have a carpeted lesion encompassing the small bowel anastomosis in the region of the donor pancreas. As endoscopic mucosal resection was impracticable because of technical limitations, the patient was referred to transplant surgical team for surgical exploration and ultimately required organ resection. This represents a unique presentation of an ampullary adenoma with high-grade dysplasia requiring device-assisted enteroscopy requiring multidisciplinary management.
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