Radiology
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Thirteen chest radiographs and computed tomographic (CT) scans obtained from 11 patients with hypersensitivity pneumonitis were reviewed. The CT findings were correlated with open lung biopsy findings in seven patients. The two patients with acute hypersensitivity pneumonitis showed air-space opacification on CT scans. ⋯ These findings reflected the histologic findings, which consisted of interstitial pneumonitis, cellular bronchiolitis, and small, noncaseating granulomas. The six patients with symptoms for 12 months or longer also showed irregular linear opacities on CT scans, corresponding to areas of fibrosis. CT scans were superior to radiographs in helping to assess the type and extent of abnormalities, and high-resolution CT scans were superior to conventional CT scans.
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Computed tomography (CT) used in cases of blunt abdominal trauma has been found sensitive in detection of bowel and mesenteric injuries and discrimination of operable from nonoperable candidates. In 51 patients with suspected bowel or mesenteric injury following blunt abdominal trauma, CT correctly depicted bowel hematoma or mesenteric injury in 17 of 19 nonoperable patients (89%) and severe injuries in one patient who died preoperatively. In 26 of 28 patients who underwent therapeutic laparotomy (93%), initial CT enabled identification of surgically confirmed injuries. ⋯ CT findings that correlated with bowel or mesenteric injury requiring surgery were free peritoneal fluid (27 of 28, 96%), mesenteric infiltration (24 of 28, 86%), thick-walled bowel (17 of 28, 61%), associated abdominal injuries (12 of 28, 43%), and free air (nine of 28, 32%). In nonoperable cases, CT scans demonstrated bowel thickening (84%) but less frequently peritoneal fluid (21%), mesenteric infiltration (26%), or associated injuries (5%). In three of four patients who underwent nontherapeutic laparotomy, preoperative CT correctly imaged the limited abdominal injuries.
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A new method was developed to differentiate the upper lobe from the middle lobe of the right lung with thin-section, high-resolution computed tomography. In the upper lobe, a medial subsegmental bronchus of an anterior segmental bronchus is always located lateral to the corresponding artery. ⋯ In other words, the anatomic relationship between the subsegmental bronchi and the corresponding pulmonary arteries in the upper lobe is opposite to that in the middle lobe. One hundred seventeen cases, including 54 cases of lobar volume loss, were reviewed with this method, and in each case it was possible to differentiate the upper lobe from the middle lobe without the contiguous section analysis.
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Cancer that recurs after surgery and radiation therapy remains a major problem. The claimed effectiveness of thermobrachytherapy in patients with this problem prompted the present study. Forty-six lesions (20 head and neck, 18 pelvic, seven chest wall, and one limb sarcoma) in 38 patients were treated with interstitial hyperthermia that sandwiched the use of Ir-192 with the aim of delivering 2,000-6,000 cGy, depending on prior dose and tissue tolerance. ⋯ No significant relation was found between heating patterns and tumor response. Of all the prognostic factors studied, the radiation dose was the most significant, with a complete response rate being 78% when the total radiation dose exceeded 6,000 cGy, compared with 8% when the dose was lower than 5,000 cGy (P less than .005). The tumor volume also was important, with smaller lesions responding much better than larger ones (P = .1).
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Angiographic findings in 61 stab wounds to the neck were correlated with specific clinical findings. Eighteen of the stab wounds were associated with one or more major physical findings that included (a) pulse deficit, (b) active bleeding or expanding hematoma, (c) bruit or murmur, (d) neurologic deficit, or (e) hypotension. ⋯ The other 43 stab wounds were associated with minor physical findings, with the only indications for angiography being nonexpanding hematoma or proximity of trauma to major vessels. None of these 43 wounds involved significant vascular injury.