Journal of ultrasound in medicine : official journal of the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine
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The authors report three cases of urethral obstruction caused by stones. The diagnosis was made with ultrasound and the stones removed immediately by a transurethral catheter guided by ultrasound.
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To evaluate the possibility that sonography might be effective in the clinical detection of foreign bodies in the soft tissues, we used high-resolution sonography to study 10 patients with suspected foreign bodies in the hand and foot. Using ultrasound, we detected foreign bodies (glass, metal wire) in the sole of the foot of two patients and glass in the hand of another. Seven patients were proved to be free of foreign bodies. ⋯ Ultrasound also pinpointed the surface beneath which the foreign bodies lay and localized all precisely as to depth from the surface. While detection of a foreign body is important, precise localization is crucial to avoid miscalculation of surgery leading to increased tissue damage, blood loss, and an increased risk of complications. This initial study suggests that high-resolution sonography has applicability in both the detection and the precise localization of foreign bodies in the soft tissues, but the sensitivity and specificity of the procedure remains to be determined.
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We report a sonographic sign which reliably distinguishes those hydrocephalic fetal heads associated with a neural tube defect from those which are not, particularly in the second trimester. This sign involves a "pointed" deformity of the frontal aspect of the skull in fetuses with hydrocephalus, indicating the presence of a neural tube defect. ⋯ It was less reliable in the third trimester; however, this sign was not present in any of the fetuses with hydrocephalus who did not have a neural tube defect. Angulation or pointing of the fetal frontal bone when hydrocephalus is present, particularly in the second trimester, seems to be a reliable predictor of an associated neural tube defect and mandates a careful search for this defect.
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Comparative Study
Ectopic pregnancy. Diagnosis by sonography correlated with quantitative HCG levels.
Pelvic sonograms were correlated with simultaneous human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) determinations in 150 women with early intrauterine pregnancy (N = 76) and ectopic pregnancy (N = 74). Of the 76 patients with intrauterine pregnancy (IUP), 55 had HCG levels exceeding 1,800 mIU/ml (Second International Standard), and in each case a gestational sac was identified. ⋯ Although six patients (8%) with ectopic pregnancy demonstrated a "pseudogestational sac," no case was confused with a true gestational sac. We conclude that, when the HCG level exceeds 1,800 mIU/ml, an intrauterine gestational sac is normally detected and its absence is evidence for an ectopic pregnancy.