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Intravenous Contrast (intravenous + contrast)
Selected AbstractsAssessment and compensation of susceptibility artifacts in gradient echo MRI of hyperpolarized 3He gasMAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE, Issue 2 2003Jim M. Wild Abstract The effects of macroscopic background field gradients upon 2D gradient echo images of inhaled 3He in the human lung were investigated at 1.5 T. Effective compensation of in-slice signal loss in 3He gradient echo images was then demonstrated using a multiple acquisition interleaved single gradient echo sequence. This method restores signal dephasing through a combination of separate images acquired with different slice refocusing gradients. In vivo imaging of volunteers with the sequence shows substantial restoration of signal at the lung periphery and close to blood vessels. The technique presented may be useful when using 3He MRI for volumetric measurements of lung ventilation and in studies using 3He combined with intravenous contrast as a means of assessing lung ventilation/perfusion (V/Q). Magn Reson Med 50:417,422, 2003. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Cerebral vaso-occlusive event with low-osmolar intravenous contrast in a patient with sickle cell diseaseAMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY, Issue 5 2006D. Zantomio No abstract is available for this article. [source] Computed Tomography of the Lungs of the Dog by a Six-generation CT Scanner, Intravenous Contrast Medium and Different WindowsANATOMIA, HISTOLOGIA, EMBRYOLOGIA, Issue 2005L. Cardoso Computed tomography (CT) is a modern technique of image diagnosis particularly recommended in human medicine to evaluate the existence of pulmonary pathological changes such as neoplasms, metastasis, interstitial infiltrates, etc. In veterinary medicine, however, few anatomical and clinical CT studies in the dog have used apparatus of the latest generation, including injection of intravenous contrast and application of regional specific CT windows with different window width (WW) and window level (WL) to evaluate the lungs, the pulmonary vessels and the bronchial structures. This methodology allows the obtaining of clear CT images with high capacity of tissue discrimination and different shades of attenuation. In this work we have planned a tomographic study of the lungs of the dog by using a six-generation spiral CT scanner (Toshiba Ex Vision), belonging to the private Medical Institute of Radiology ,Irion' of Porto Alegre, Brazil. Four mixed-breed mature dogs (4,6 years, 15,20 kg) were used, two males and two females. The dogs were anaesthetized and kept in a maximum inspiration when obtaining the images. Dogs were placed in a stretcher in a ventral or sternal recumbency. Previously, the contrast urografin® was injected in the cephalic vein. Different CT windows were applied in order to increase the quality of the images: pulmonary window (WW 928; WL -680), high-resolution pulmonary window (WW 1085; WL -750), and soft tissue window (WW 652; WL -34). The use of intravenous contrast, different CT windows and a modern CT apparatus produced excellent images of the pulmonary parenchyma, the pleural cavity, the pulmonary veins, the lobular rami of the pulmonary artery and the lobular bronchi. [source] Is Hospital Admission and Observation Required after a Normal Abdominal Computed Tomography Scan in Children with Blunt Abdominal Trauma?ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 10 2008Smita Awasthi MD Abstract Objectives:, The objective was to determine if hospital admission of children with blunt abdominal trauma for observation of possible intraabdominal injury (IAI) is necessary after a normal abdominal computed tomography (CT) scan in the emergency department (ED). Methods:, The authors conducted a prospective observational cohort study of children less than 18 years of age with blunt abdominal trauma who underwent an abdominal CT scan in the ED. Abdominal CT scans were obtained with intravenous contrast but no oral contrast. The decision to hospitalize the patient was made by the attending emergency physician (EP) with the trauma or pediatric surgery teams. An abnormal abdominal CT scan was defined by the presence of any visualized IAI or findings suggestive of possible IAI (e.g., intraperitoneal fluid without solid organ injury). Patients were followed to determine if IAI was later diagnosed and the need for acute therapeutic intervention if IAI was present. Results:, A total of 1,295 patients underwent abdominal CT, and 1,085 (84%) patients had normal abdominal CT scans in the ED and make up the study population. Seven-hundred thirty-seven (68%) were hospitalized, and 348 were discharged to home. None of the 348 patients discharged home and 2 of the 737 hospitalized patients were identified with an IAI after a normal initial abdominal CT. The IAIs in patients with normal initial CT scans included a 10-year-old with a mesenteric hematoma and serosal tear at laparotomy and a 10-year-old with a perinephric hematoma on repeat CT. Neither underwent specific therapy. The negative predictive value (NPV) of a normal abdominal CT scan for IAI was 99.8% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 99.3% to 100%). Conclusions:, Children with blunt abdominal trauma and a normal abdominal CT scan in the ED are at very low risk of having a subsequently diagnosed IAI and are very unlikely to require a therapeutic intervention. Hospitalization of children for evaluation of possible undiagnosed IAI after a normal abdominal CT scan has a low yield and is generally unnecessary. [source] Metanephric adenoma of the kidney: clinical and radiological study of nine casesBJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 11 2009Cyrille Bastide OBJECTIVE To analyse the clinical and radiological features of metanephric adenoma (MA, a rare benign renal tumour) in nine patients, and to review previous reports. PATIENTS AND METHODS From 1992 to 2007, we identified nine patients (eight women and one man) with MA at our institution. Four patients had a radical nephrectomy and five a partial nephrectomy. Preoperative imaging was reviewed by a senior radiologist. Renal colour Doppler ultrasonography (US), abdominal computed tomography and abdominal magnetic resonance imaging were used in seven, eight and four patients, respectively. RESULTS The mean (range) age of the patients was 46.8 (19,79) years. Six tumours were discovered incidentally. Three patients were symptomatic (two with haematuria and one with polycythaemia). There was no vascular flow on colour Doppler US within the tumours. There were peripheral and/or central calcifications in six of the tumours. All the tumours were well-circumscribed with minimal enhancement after injection with non-ionic intravenous contrast or gadolinium. CONCLUSIONS Renal MA is a benign tumour occurring mainly in young and middle-aged women. Polycythaemia is associated in ,10%. Generally, MA is solid, well-circumscribed and hypovascular, often with calcifications. Based on a combination of clinical and imaging features, it might be possible to suspect the diagnosis of MA and propose a preoperative diagnostic biopsy, a partial nephrectomy or active surveillance. [source] |