La Radiologia medica
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La Radiologia medica · Dec 1994
Comparative Study[Anesthesiological problems in magnetic resonance].
A prospective study was carried out on 68 patients examined with Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) under general anesthesia. Mean patients age was 10 years (range: 9 days to 77 years). MRI was performed with a 1.5 T superconductive magnet and different anatomical regions were studied: the brain in 63 cases, the lumbar spine in 3, the cervical spine in 1 and finally the upper abdomen in 1 patient. ⋯ Minor complications occurred in 5 more patients. Image quality was excellent in 75% of cases, while few movement artifacts were observed in the extant 25%. To conclude, isoflurane anesthesia is a safe, effective and efficient type of sedation for the patients to be submitted to MRI which can be used also on an outpatient basis.
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Celiac plexus neurolysis is considered an effective technique for relieving abdominal cancer pain. CT yields accurate anatomical detailing, thus allowing the indirect location of the celiac plexus and the planning of needle trajectory and positioning. September 1992 to December 1993, twenty-eight celiac plexus neurolyses for pain relief were performed in 26 patients (13 men and 13 women), 17 through the anterior and 11 through the posterior access. ⋯ Only transient orthostatic hypotension requiring no treatment developed in all our patients during the first 24 hours after the block. To conclude, we believe celiac plexus alcoholization under CT guidance to be a safe and effective technique for relieving abdominal pain due to cancer or benign conditions. We prefer the anterior approach because it is better accepted by the patients and more easily performed by the operators.
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La Radiologia medica · Sep 1994
Comparative Study[A comparative study of the pterygopalatine fossa by computed tomography and magnetic resonance].
The pterygopalatine fossa (PPF) is a narrow, bone lined space containing many major cranial nerves and vessels connecting it to the middle and infratemporal cranial fossa, the oral, nasal and orbital cavities and the rhinopharynx. The internal maxillary artery, the second branch of the V cranial nerve and the sphenopalatine ganglion are the main structures which are found in the PPF. Because of its strategic site, the PPF can be involved in many pathologic conditions originating from the nasal fossa, the orbit, the paranasal sinuses or the rhinopharynx roof. ⋯ We found HRCT scans and post-processing 3D studies to be particularly indicated in bone structure analysis. SPGR, spin- and fast-spin-echo MR sequences allowed us to obtained reliable images of the main nervous and vascular structures found in the PPF. Finally, we believe combined CT and MRI to be the method of choice in the study of PPF anatomy and in the assessment of diseases involving the PPF area.