Clinical radiology
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The aim of this study was to compare the performance of digital frontal radiographs vs digital lateral shoot-through radiographs for the diagnosis of pneumothoraces in supine patients. A total of 146 pairs of radiographs were performed on 32 ventilated patients on the Intensive Care Unit. ⋯ At least two out of three observers positively diagnosed a pneumothorax in 13/146 (8.9%) of the frontal radiographs compared to 43/146 (29.4%) of the lateral radiographs (P < 0.0001), but suboptimal images were obtained more often with lateral shoot-through radiographs than with frontal radiographs. We conclude that digital lateral shoot-through radiographs are significantly more sensitive than digital frontal radiographs for the diagnosis of pneumothoraces in supine patients.
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A 26-year-old man received a gunshot wound to the left flank. No exit wound was seen. ⋯ Abdominal aortic pseudoaneurysm with extravasation of contrast into the retroperitoneum and embolization of the bullet to the left iliac artery were shown. The diagnostic value of the CT was considerable, but angiography was still required for definitive localization of the bullet.
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A prospective study of 1494 new referrals for scrotal ultrasound was performed over a 5 year period. In 610 patients referred with a clear clinical diagnosis of epididymal disease, and no clinical suspicion of malignancy, ultrasound diagnosed unsuspected testicular tumours (seven malignant, one benign) in eight patients. In this series one case was counted as false negative for ultrasound diagnosis of tumour, as tumour was the differential diagnosis and not the primary diagnosis. ⋯ Sensitivity and specificity of ultrasound for the diagnosis of testicular malignancy in this series is 98% and 99.8% respectively. It is concluded that all patients with scrotal symptoms should be examined by ultrasound in order to achieve the maximal clinical benefit from the early diagnosis of testicular tumours. The implications of this are discussed.
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We have retrospectively assessed the computed tomography (CT) findings in 92 patients suffering severe blunt abdominal trauma. Surgical findings and clinical follow-up were correlated with the CT findings. In nine patients CT was first used after emergency surgery and provided baseline data which was useful for further management. ⋯ After an initial trial of non-operative management, the remaining six patients went to surgery where there was good concordance with the CT findings except for one missed renal injury. Active non-operative management of blunt abdominal trauma is widely accepted in haemodynamically stable patients and this report shows how CT supports this policy of surgical restraint in such cases. However, on review CT missed 13 injuries in nine patients overall; stricter attention to technique and better equipment may lead to improved results in the future.
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Comparative Study
High-resolution computed tomography of drug-induced lung disease.
In order to determine the potential clinical utility of high-resolution CT (HRCT) in the assessment of drug-induced lung disease, we reviewed the chest radiographs and HRCT scans of 23 patients and five normal controls. The radiographs and HRCT scans were reviewed separately in random order by two independent observers who were not aware of the relative numbers of patients and controls. Abnormal findings were detected in the affected patients in 17/23 radiographs compared to 23/23 HRCT scans. ⋯ These include fibrosis with or without consolidation (n = 12), ground-glass opacities (n = 7), widespread bilateral consolidation (n = 2), and bronchial wall thickening with areas of decreased attenuation (n = 2). The results of this study indicate that HRCT is more sensitive than the radiograph in the detection of drug-induced lung disease. The appearances demonstrated by HRCT reflect the pathological mechanisms of drug-induced lung disease.