Radiographics : a review publication of the Radiological Society of North America, Inc
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A rapidly emerging clinical application of positron emission tomography (PET) is the detection and staging of cancer with the glucose analogue tracer 2-[fluorine-18]fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG). Proper interpretation of FDG PET images requires knowledge of the normal physiologic distribution of the tracer, frequently encountered physiologic variants, and benign pathologic causes of FDG uptake that can be confused with a malignant neoplasm. One hour after intravenous administration, high FDG activity is present in the brain, the myocardium, and--due to the excretory route--the urinary tract. ⋯ Interpretive pitfalls commonly encountered on FDG PET images of the body obtained 1 hour after tracer administration can be mistaken for cancer. Such pitfalls include variable physiologic FDG uptake in the digestive tract, thyroid gland, skeletal muscle, myocardium, bone marrow, and genitourinary tract and benign pathologic FDG uptake in healing bone, lymph nodes, joints, sites of infection, and cases of regional response to infection and aseptic inflammatory response. In many instances, these physiologic variants and benign pathologic causes of FDG uptake can be specifically recognized and properly categorized; in other instances, such as the lymph node response to inflammation or infection, focal FDG uptake is nonspecific.
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Acute aortic dissection is a cardiovascular emergency that requires prompt diagnosis and treatment. Helical computed tomography (CT) allows diagnosis of acute aortic dissection with a sensitivity and specificity of nearly 100%. With helical CT, a dissection involving the ascending aorta (type A in the Stanford classification) can be differentiated from one distal to the left subclavian artery (type B). ⋯ Helical CT is useful in follow-up of aortic dissection by allowing assessment of early and late changes after surgery or medical treatment. Such changes include postoperative complications of type A dissection, healing of intramural hematoma, progression of intramural hematoma, and aneurysms of the true or false lumen. Helical CT can also be used to monitor potentially life-threatening ischemic complications of abdominal branch vessels.