Magnetic resonance imaging
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Case Reports
Spontaneous retroperitoneal hemorrhage secondary to subcapsular renal hematoma: MRI findings.
Spontaneous retroperitoneal hemorrhage is a rare intraabdominal bleeding. In this report we present a case of a nontraumatic retroperitoneal hemorrhage secondary to spontaneous subcapsular renal hematoma. A 54-year-old patient who was under warfarin therapy, developed subcapsular right renal hematoma. ⋯ The source of subcapsular hematoma was shown to be the rupture of hemorrhagic renal cyst on MRI. Extension of hemorrhage into the retroperitoneal space anterior to right psoas muscle was also successfully shown on MRI. Patient underwent nephrectomy and retroperitoneal blood was evacuated.
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Multislice proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (1H MRSI) at 25 ms echo time was used to measure concentrations of myo-inositol (mI), N-acetylaspartate (NAA), and creatine (Cr) and choline (Cho) in ten normal subjects between 22 and 84 years of age (mean age 44 +/- 18 years). By co-analysis with MRI based tissue segmentation results, metabolite distributions were analyzed for each tissue type and for different brain regions. Measurement reliability was evaluated using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC). ⋯ Cr of parietal gray matter was 113% of white matter. Reliability was relatively high (ICC from.70 to.93) for all metabolites in white matter and for NAA and Cr in gray matter, though limited (ICC less than.63) for mI and Cho in gray matter. These findings indicate that voxel gray/white matter contributions, regional variations in metabolite concentrations, and reliability limitations must be considered when interpreting 1H MR spectra of the brain.