Radiographics : a review publication of the Radiological Society of North America, Inc
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Computed tomography (CT) and ultrasonography (US) are ideally suited for demonstrating urachal remnant diseases. A patent urachus is demonstrated at longitudinal US and occasionally at CT as a tubular connection between the anterosuperior aspect of the bladder and the umbilicus. An umbilical-urachal sinus manifests at US as a thickened tubular structure along the midline below the umbilicus. ⋯ Percutaneous needle biopsy or fluid aspiration is usually needed for diagnosis and therapeutic planning. Nevertheless, CT and US can help identify most disease entities originating from the urachal remnant in the anterior abdominal wall. Understanding the anatomy and the imaging features of urachal remnant diseases is essential for correct diagnosis and proper management.
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Bronchial anatomy is adequately demonstrated with the appropriate spiral computed tomographic technique on cross-sectional images, multiplanar reconstruction images, and three-dimensional reconstruction images. Contrary to the numerous variations of lobar or segmental bronchial subdivisions, abnormal bronchi originating from the trachea or main bronchi are rare. Major bronchial abnormalities include accessory cardiac bronchus (ACB) and "tracheal" bronchus. ⋯ Minor bronchial abnormalities include variants of tracheal bronchus, displaced segmental bronchi, and bronchial agenesis. The main embryogenic hypotheses for congenital bronchial abnormalities are the reduction, migration, and selection theories. Knowledge and understanding of congenital bronchial abnormalities may have important implications for diagnosis, bronchoscopy, surgery, brachytherapy, and intubation.
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Review
Imaging of osteochondroma: variants and complications with radiologic-pathologic correlation.
Osteochondroma represents the most common bone tumor and is a developmental lesion rather than a true neoplasm. It constitutes 20%-50% of all benign bone tumors and 10%-15% of all bone tumors. Its radiologic features are often pathognomonic and identically reflect its pathologic appearance. ⋯ Continued lesion growth and a hyaline cartilage cap greater than 1.5 cm in thickness, after skeletal maturity, suggest malignant transformation. Variants of osteochondroma include subungual exostosis, dysplasia epiphysealis hemimelica, turret and traction exostoses, bizarre parosteal osteochondromatous proliferation, and florid reactive periostitis. Recognition of the radiologic spectrum of appearances of osteochondroma and its variants usually allows prospective diagnosis and differentiation of the numerous potential complications, thus helping guide therapy and improving patient management.
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Ischemic bowel disease represents a broad spectrum of diseases with various clinical and radiologic manifestations, which range from localized transient ischemia to catastrophic necrosis of the gastrointestinal tract. The primary causes of insufficient blood flow to the intestine are diverse and include thromboembolism, nonocclusive causes, bowel obstruction, neoplasms, vasculitis, abdominal inflammatory conditions, trauma, chemotherapy, radiation, and corrosive injury. Computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance (MR) imaging can demonstrate the ischemic bowel segment and may be helpful in determining the primary cause. ⋯ However, regardless of the primary cause, the imaging findings of bowel ischemia are similar. Furthermore, the bowel changes simulate inflammatory or neoplastic conditions. Understanding the pathogenesis of various conditions leading to mesenteric ischemia helps the radiologist recognize ischemic bowel disease and avoid delayed diagnosis, unnecessary surgery, or less than optimal management.