Radiologic clinics of North America
-
This article focuses on three main topics: (1) the importance of emphysema as a serious respiratory disease, (2) qualitative assessment of emphysema using CT, and (3) the emerging importance of quantitative CT in the evaluation of patients with emphysema for surgery and drug therapy. CT also can identify the major anatomic subtypes of emphysema. CT is critical in the assessment of patients with the potential for lung volume reduction surgery. CT may well be superior to pulmonary function tests in the longitudinal assessment of current and proposed drug therapies for the treatment of emphysema.
-
The ground-glass pattern is a common but nonspecific finding on CT. In certain clinical circumstances, it can suggest a specific diagnosis, indicate a potentially treatable disease, and guide a clinician to an appropriate area for biopsy. A pattern of centrilobular ground-glass nodules is fairly specific for the diagnosis of hypersensitivity pneumonitis with the appropriate clinical history. ⋯ The gloved finger sign is very suggestive of allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis. The halo sign is highly suggestive of early angioinvasive pulmonary aspergillosis in patients with acute leukemia. When a split pleura sign is seen, the diagnosis is often empyema, although other causes of pleuritis can lead to a similar CT appearance.
-
Ultrasound-guided intervention has enjoyed a period of unprecedented growth because its many advantages over other guidance modalities have been recognized. The decreased procedure time, increased accuracy, and safety of procedures performed under ultrasound guidance are of obvious benefit to radiologist and patient alike for all interventional applications. Lesions once considered unsafe to sample are now reasonably approached with ultrasound guidance. As equipment technology continues to improve and radiologists increasingly recognize the benefits of guiding procedures with ultrasound, the shift of procedures away from CT and fluoroscopic guidance will continue and ultrasound guidance will become the guidance method of choice for most interventional procedures.
-
The diagnosis of common and opportunistic infections in patients with HIV begins with clinical suspicion and involves relatively standard methodology. Musculoskeletal infection is sometimes the first manifestation of an HIV infection. In patients with HIV, the infections tend to be more advanced at presentation, occur in unusual sites, are caused by a wider spectrum of pathogens, and tend to show an inadequate or delayed response to therapy. The index of suspicion for musculoskeletal infections should be high when reviewing imaging studies of patients with HIV.