European radiology
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Head and neck reconstructive surgery after cancer ablative surgery is now commonly performed with closure of the surgical defects by microvascular free tissue transfer. The most common flaps used for reconstruction are the radial forearm flap, the anterolateral thigh flap and fibula flap. Radiographic appearance of these flaps depends on the individual components of the flap, and may consist of skin, fat, muscle and/or bone. There are various adverse outcomes in these patients, the most significant being tumour recurrence that typically occurs at the flap margins. Other flap complications include flap necrosis from vascular thrombosis or infection. The goal of this article is to enhance radiologists' familiarity with different methods of flap reconstruction, flap margins and vascular anastomoses that will lead to a better appreciation of expected postoperative radiographic appearance. ⋯ • Flaps are the most common reconstructive techniques used in neck cancer surgery. • Imaging appearance of flaps depends on their components and time since surgery. • Most tumour recurrence after reconstruction occurs at the margins of the flap.
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Comparative Study
Quantification of early fatty infiltration of the rotator cuff muscles: comparison of multi-echo Dixon with single-voxel MR spectroscopy.
To evaluate quantification of early fatty infiltration in supraspinatus muscles with magnetic resonance (MR) imaging using a T2*-corrected multi-echo 3D-gradient-echo Dixon-based sequence (multi-echo Dixon) and compare it to proton-MR-spectroscopy. ⋯ • Multi-echo Dixon for low fat quantification in muscles is reliable. • Multi-echo Dixon low fat quantification is comparable to single-voxel MR spectroscopy • Multi-echo Dixon detects substantial differences in fatty infiltration within Goutallier 0-1.
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To correlate imaging features of resected lung adenocarcinoma with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutation and the IASLC/ATS/ERS classification histological subtypes. ⋯ • Ground-glass opacity (GGO) proportion is significantly higher in EGFR-mutated adenocarcinomas • Exon 19 or 21 mutated adenocarcinomas shows significantly higher GGO proportion • GGO absence is an independent predictor of negative EGFR mutation in lung adenocarcinomas.