J Radiol
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Review Case Reports Comparative Study
[Advanced vascular imaging techniques of supra-aortic, encephalic and medullary vessels].
Recent technical progress of MRI and CT made it possible to widen the field of exploration of the noninvasive vascular imaging in the study of supra-aortic, encephalic and medullary vessels. MRI of the carotid plaques, CT angiography in the detection of the intracranial aneurysms, intracranial time-resolved MRA and MRA of the spinal cord took their place in the field of the noninvasive vascular imaging.
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Review Case Reports Comparative Study
[MR and CT perfusion imaging of the brain: principles and clinical applications].
MR and CT imaging techniques provide both morphological data and functional data. MR and recently CT perfusion have substantially modified the treatment of acute stroke. CT perfusion offers new opportunities to improve the management strategy in vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage. Both are also helpful for the diagnosis of brain tumors and the assessment of treatment effects.
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Review Case Reports Comparative Study Historical Article
[Biliary colic: imaging diagnosis].
Biliary colic is the most common clinical presentation of symptomatic gallstone disease, whatever its localisation (cholelithiasis or choledocolithiasis). The pain of biliary colic is unfortunately called "colic", a word suggesting paroxystic bouts and usually described as localised in the right upper quadrant. In fact, biliary pain is most frequently epigastric in location, usually starts abruptly to generally persists without fluctuation and resolve gradually over two to four hours. ⋯ Non invasive imaging of the biliary tract is now generally easy to obtain; abdominal ultrasound for gallbladder stones and magnetic resonance cholangiography for the main bile duct and the intrahepatic bile ducts. But, for gallbladder stones, the greatest care must be taken by the radiologist to link up the symptomatology and the cholelithiasis. Precise description of the abdominal pain (nature, intensity, location, duration, irradiation...) is needed and must be searched by the radiologist to prevent misdiagnosis.
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Diagnostic and therapeutic interventional procedures are rapidly expanding and, when guided by imaging, are more efficient then when performed with a blinded technique. Compared to fluoroscopy and CT, ultrasound does not utilize ionizing radiation. ⋯ Technological improvements have increased the precision of ultrasound guidance and have contributed to reduce the risk of complication. Real time scanning allows simultaneous visualization of the target and of needle progression and has diminished the rate of complications, that are infrequent if the operator uses a strict sterile technique and respects the contraindications.
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The advent of new MR techniques such as perfusion and diffusion weighted imaging has revolutionized diagnostic imaging in stroke. In some institutions, MRI is used as the sole screening imaging technique for acute stroke patients. In this document, the authors will review the MR pattern of acute ischemic arterial stroke, highlight the usefulness of MRI for the identification of acute hematomas and stroke like episodes, present the potential use of MRI in the management of acute stroke patients, especially when thrombolysis is contemplated, and discuss the role of MRI for imaging transient ischemic attack.