Journal of thoracic imaging
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Comparative Study
Postmortem imaging of blunt chest trauma using CT and MRI: comparison with autopsy.
Postmortem examination of chest trauma is an important domain in forensic medicine, which is today performed using autopsy. Since the implementation of cross-sectional imaging methods in forensic medicine such as computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), a number of advantages in comparison with autopsy have been described. Within the scope of validation of cross-sectional radiology in forensic medicine, the comparison of findings of postmortem imaging and autopsy in chest trauma was performed. ⋯ The sensitivity and specificity of our results demonstrate that postmortem CT and MRI are useful diagnostic methods for assessing chest trauma in forensic medicine as a supplement to autopsy. Further radiologic-pathologic case studies are necessary to define the role of postmortem CT and MRI as a single examination modality.
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Case Reports
Dendriform pulmonary ossification in a patient with a past history of giant cell tumor in femur.
Diffuse pulmonary ossification most commonly occurs in men in their fifth and sixth decades of life and is usually associated with diffuse and chronic lung disease, cardiac disease, or other systemic disorders. In this report, we describe a case of dendriform pulmonary ossification with a past history of giant cell tumor in the femur that occurred 8 years before. ⋯ The patient was young (30 y old) and had no chronic lung or cardiac diseases. We speculate that the pulmonary ossification might have been due to dissemination of bone cells into the pulmonary circulation during bone curettage.