AJR. American journal of roentgenology
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AJR Am J Roentgenol · Apr 1995
Evaluation of the portal venous system before liver transplantation: value of phase-contrast MR angiography.
The purpose of this study was to assess the accuracy of phase-contrast MR angiography with gadolinium in evaluating the patency and blood flow direction of the portal venous system; the presence, extent, and type of varices; and the patency of surgical decompressive shunts in patients before liver transplantation. This information is essential in management and care of patients with chronic liver disease and portal hypertension and those who are candidates for liver transplantation. ⋯ Phase-contrast MR angiography is accurate for evaluating the patency and flow direction of the portal venous system, detecting and determining the distribution and extent of varices, and assessing the patency of surgically created shunts. Therefore, it is a reliable and noninvasive technique that can provide crucial information in the preoperative workup of liver transplant recipients.
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AJR Am J Roentgenol · Mar 1995
Obstructive lung disease in children after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation: evaluation with high-resolution CT.
Obstructive lung disease is a major complication of bone marrow transplantation related to graft-versus-host disease. The purpose of this study was to determine the usefulness of high-resolution CT to evaluate obstructive lung disease occurring in children after bone marrow transplantation. ⋯ High-resolution CT of the lungs can show extensive abnormality in children who develop chronic obstructive lung disease after bone marrow transplantation. High-resolution CT is a useful noninvasive technique in the evaluation of this disease.
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AJR Am J Roentgenol · Mar 1995
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialCT of the chest: minimal tube current required for good image quality with the least radiation dose.
We wanted to determine minimal tube current (mAs) required for consistently good image quality on conventional 10-mm collimation chest CT and effect of tube current reduction on detection of mediastinal and lung abnormalities. Tube current reduction is desirable to reduce patient radiation dose. ⋯ A twofold reduction in tube current (400-140 mAs) and resultant radiation dose did not cause a significant change in subjective image quality or in detection of mediastinal or lung abnormalities with conventional chest CT. One hundred forty milliampere-seconds is the minimal tube current required to provide good image quality in patients of average weight.
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AJR Am J Roentgenol · Mar 1995
ReviewInterventional radiology of the chest: image-guided percutaneous drainage of pleural effusions, lung abscess, and pneumothorax.
Percutaneous catheter drainage of intrathoracic collections has developed as a natural extension of similar interventional radiologic procedures in the abdomen. The advent of CT and sonography, which allow detection and characterization of pleural and parenchymal collections, combined with advances in drainage catheter design and interventional techniques, have made imaging-guided management of intrathoracic collections a safe and effective alternative to traditional surgical therapy. This article begins with a review of the etiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment of parapneumonic pleural effusion, which remains the most common indication for image-guided percutaneous drainage. Subsequent sections consider issues related to percutaneous drainage of malignant pleural effusion, lung abscess, and pneumothorax.
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AJR Am J Roentgenol · Mar 1995
H. Joachim Burhenne Lecture. Common areas of interest between interventional biliary radiology and endoscopy.
Therapeutic biliary endoscopy is a more recent subspecialty than interventional biliary radiology, and much has been learned from the pioneering work of interventional radiologists. The areas of interest to biliary radiologists and biliary endoscopists are largely identical. The common bile duct can be approached either by the antegrade percutaneous transhepatic approach or by the retrograde endoscopic transpapillary route. ⋯ For patients who have had abdominal surgery and in whom access to the papilla is sometimes impossible because of a long afferent jejunal loop, radiologic therapy is suitable. They also can be treated by the rendezvous approach, whereby the radiologist feeds a guidewire through the papilla into the duodenum and the endoscopist then accesses the bile duct in a retrograde fashion. Calculous disease and ductal stenoses are the main indications for endoscopic therapy; these and other conditions of the biliary tract will be discussed here.