Clinical radiology
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To evaluate progressive changes in quantitative CT features of the non-solid component of ground-glass nodules (GGNs) from baseline to follow-up to differentiate invasive (minimally invasive adenocarcinoma [MIA] and invasive adenocarcinoma [IA]) GGNs from benign or pre-invasive (adenocarcinoma in situ [AIS]) lesions. ⋯ In GGN follow-up, the diameter of benign and AIS, and invasive GGNs significantly increased. Additional analysis of mean density and density deviation in the non-solid component may help to identify invasive GGNs.
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Multicenter Study Observational Study
Cervical spine clearance in adults following blunt trauma: a national survey across major trauma centres in England.
To assess current practice in cervical spine clearance across major trauma centres in England and review current guidelines. ⋯ Multidetector CT is the preferred initial imaging technique across most major trauma centres in England when blunt cervical spine trauma is suspected. There is widespread reliance on MRI to clear the cervical spine in both alert and obtunded patients, if initial CT imaging is normal and there is no focal neurology on clinical assessment. This calls for greater awareness of the reliability of a high-quality normal multidetector CT examination in clearing the cervical spine in the absence of focal neurology.
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Maxillofacial imaging encompasses radiology of the teeth and jaws, including the temporomandibular joints. Modalities used include intra-oral radiographs, panoramic tomography, cephalograms, cone-beam computed tomography, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, ultrasound, and radionuclide imaging. ⋯ Osteonecrosis of the jaws may follow radiotherapy or the use of bisphosphonates and other drugs. Imaging of the temporomandibular joints and the potential role of imaging in obstructive sleep apnoea are also discussed.
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Imaging of middle-ear cholesteatoma with diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and inner-ear endolymphatic hydrops (in Ménière's disease) with post-gadolinium high-resolution MRI, are reviewed. DWI MRI provides for a more specific diagnosis of tympano-mastoid cholesteatoma. There is an established and increasing role of DWI MRI in detecting both primary and postoperative cholesteatoma, localising disease, and planning surgery. ⋯ There is now increasing data to validate the application of three-dimensional (3D)-fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) sequences, performed at 4 hours post-intravenous gadolinium, in the setting of potential Ménière's disease. The clinical context and the evolution of these MRI techniques are discussed. Current MRI-based grading schemes for endolymphatic hydrops are described, together with the available data on their clinical implications.
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There are multiple emerging advanced computed tomography (CT) applications for the evaluation of the neck, many based on dual-energy CT (DECT). DECT is an advanced form of CT in which scan acquisition is performed at two different energies, enabling spectral tissue characterisation beyond what is possible with conventional single-energy CT and potentially providing a new horizon for quantitative analysis and tissue characterisation, particularly in oncological imaging. ⋯ This will then be followed by a review of different clinical applications. The focus will be on oncological imaging, but artefact reduction and other miscellaneous applications will also be discussed.