Radiology
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The sonographic findings in seven patients with surgically proved acute tenosynovitis of the hand (bacterial in six cases, of presumed viral origin in one) were reviewed. In the six patients with bacterial tenosynovitis the affected flexor tendon was larger than that of the contralateral normal digit. ⋯ The affected tendon of the single patient with tenosynovitis thought to be of viral origin was normal in size, but a focal tendon sheath fluid collection was detected that proved to be sterile at surgery. Sonography appears to be a useful imaging technique in the early diagnosis of acute suppurative tenosynovitis of the hand.
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One of the potentially troublesome sequelae of limb amputations is the development of stump neuromas at the severed ends of major nerves. The ability to define them and to distinguish them from other causes of stump pain is of considerable clinical significance. ⋯ Five patients had neuromas that were manifest as focal or generalized alteration in the caliber, size, or contour of the nerve trunk in the affected stump. The remaining five patients each had an abnormality detected; these abnormalities included heterotopic bone formation, popliteal artery aneurysm, lipoma, scar tissue, and abscess in the contralateral limb.
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Twenty-five newly diagnosed intracranial meningiomas were evaluated with magnetic resonance (MR) imaging at 1.5 T, and findings were correlated with those of computed tomography (CT), angiography, and tumor histology. Meningiomas were generally hypointense on T1-weighted images and hyperintense on T2-weighted images relative to cerebral white matter. In comparison with the cortex, they were hypointense or isointense on T1-weighted images and isointense or hyperintense on T2-weighted images. ⋯ Large meningiomas were associated with arcuate displacement and compression of adjacent gyri. MR imaging was superior to CT in defining extracerebral tumor location, tumor vascularity, arterial encasement, and venous sinus invasion. No correlation was found between the appearance on MR images and the pathologic classification.
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Radiologic studies of 57 solitary vertebral hemangiomas (VHs) were reviewed to find radiographic and computed tomographic (CT) criteria by which to distinguish asymptomatic lesions from those compressing the spinal cord. Six features were seen significantly more often in those compressing the cord: location between T-3 and T-9, involvement of the entire vertebral body, extension to the neural arch, an expanded cortex with indistinct margins, an irregular honeycomb pattern, and soft-tissue mass. ⋯ In patients with a VH and back pain of uncertain origin, the presence of three or more of these signs may indicate a potentially symptomatic VH. In such patients, spinal angiography and, in some cases, embolization, are indicated.