J Radiol
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Cerebral vascular disease in children with sickle cell disease is characterized by progressive stenosis of large arteries of the skull base, which can be detected sensitively, specifically and unexpensively by transcranial Doppler. Because sickle cell disease is responsible for basal high velocities, criteria used for diagnosis of stenosis are different than those used in non sickled children and moreover in adults. Mean velocity higher than 2 meters per second is predictive of a 40% risk for stroke in the three following years, but transfusion program maintaining hemoglobin S under 30%, reduces the risk to 2%. It is important to test each child with sickle cell disease by the age of one or two years, in order to detect cerebral vasculopathy before overt stroke and its residual deficits and to initiate appropriate treatment
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Complications following lumbar spine surgery are reported to occur in 15 to 30% of cases. Acute postsurgical complications (hematoma, infection.) require urgent imaging. Imaging of recurrent pain following lumbar surgery, often with a clinical presentation that is poorly specific in nature, is sometimes difficult. ⋯ Diskography with post-diskogram CT can be added as well in patients with discordant results at clinical and imaging work up. The main causes of failed back syndrome are recurrent disk herniation (usually easily diagnosed), postsurgical granulation tissue/epidural fibrosis (diagnosed based on imaging) and central or lateral bony spinal stenosis. Spondylodiskitis, arachnoiditis and pseudomeningocele are other less frequent etiologies.
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Bronchial carcinoma is the principal cause of cancer death. Unlike cancers of the breast and colon that are already the subject of screening programmes, proof has not yet been provided that screening for bronchial carcinoma is of value in terms of reduction in mortality. Technological improvements and the advent of low dose spiral CT scanning has lead to a recent renewal of interest in this subject. ⋯ Other data suggest a possible improvement in survival of tumours discovered by screening. Nevertheless it is necessary to demonstrate that screening improves the survival of patients with bronchial carcinoma. The present consensus does not advocate mass screening by CT scanning but that high risk subjects should voluntarily participate in randomised controlled trials which alone will confirm or refute the validity of this approach.