Articles

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More than 200 results
Article

Chiari malformations

Chiari malformations are a group of structural conditions characterized by congenital caudal 'displacement' of the cerebellar tonsils below the foramen magnum, often with associated caudal displacement of brainstem. Terminology The description of 'malformation' may not be accurate for Chiari 0...
Article

Tarlov cyst

Tarlov cysts, also called perineural cysts, are CSF-filled dilatations of the nerve root sheath at the dorsal root ganglion (posterior nerve root sheath). These are type II spinal meningeal cysts that are, by definition, extradural but contain neural tissue. Most Tarlov cysts are asymptomatic, ...
Article

Pleural effusion

Pleural effusions are abnormal accumulations of fluid within the pleural space. They may result from a variety of pathological processes which overwhelm the pleura's ability to reabsorb fluid. Terminology "Pleural effusion" is commonly used as a catch-all term to describe any abnormal accumula...
Article

Effective dose

The effective dose (E) is a hypothetical equivalent dose uniformly applied to the whole body, which would result in the same health detriment through stochastic effects as the partial-body exposition being considered. It is calculated by summating the equivalent doses (HT) delivered to the irrad...
Article

Iliotibial band

The iliotibial band (ITB) or tract is a thick band of fascia along the lateral aspect of the thigh. Gross anatomy The ITB is a thickening in the fascia lata. Superiorly, it splits to enclose and anchor the aponeurosis of tensor fasciae latae and posteriorly most of the tendon of gluteus maximu...
Article

Müllerian duct anomalies

Müllerian duct anomalies (MDAs) are congenital abnormalities that occur when the Müllerian ducts (paramesonephric ducts) do not develop correctly. This may be due to complete agenesis, defective vertical or lateral fusion, or resorption failure. Epidemiology MDAs are estimated to occur in 1-5%...
Article

AFS classification of Müllerian anomalies

The American Fertility Society (AFS) classification of Müllerian anomalies is a seven-class system published in 1988, which is used to describe several embryonic Müllerian duct anomalies. The American Fertility Society is now known as the American Society of Reproductive Medicine (ASRM), and th...
Article

WHO classification of breast tumors (5th ed.)

The WHO classification of breast tumors is the most widely used pathologic classification system for such disorders. This classification was last revised in 2019 with the publication of the 5th edition 1. Classification Epithelial tumors of the breast benign epithelial proliferation and prec...
Article

CT stair-step artifact

The CT stair-step artifact is found in straight structures which are oriented obliquely with respect to movement of the table and appear around the edges of sagittal and coronal reformatted images when wide collimations and non-overlapping reconstruction intervals are used. It is also seen in c...
Article

Accessory iliotibial band-meniscal ligament

Accessory iliotibial band-meniscal ligament (AIML) is a fibrous connection between the iliotibial band and anterolateral aspect of the lateral meniscus 1. At least five distal insertions of the iliotibial tract about the knee have been described 2-4, but the accessory iliotibial band-meniscal l...
Article

Tissue weighting factor

The tissue weighting factor (WT) is a measure of relative contribution of an organ or tissue to the total health detriment due to stochastic effects resulting from a uniform irradiation of the entire body 1. It accounts for the variable sensitivity to ionizing radiation and size of a given organ...
Article

Gray (SI unit)

The gray (symbol Gy) is the SI unit of absorbed dose. It is defined as the absorption of one joule of energy originating from ionizing radiation per kilogram of matter 1,2, i.e. Gy = 1 J/kg. Terminology One gray is a large unit and is usually used with a prefix, e.g. milligray (mGy), microgray...
Article

Rem (unit)

The rem (an acronym for roentgen equivalent man) was the cgs unit of effective dose and was officially replaced by the sievert many years ago (1 Sv = 100 rem) 1.  One rem was a large quantity of radiation, and therefore for practical day to day use the millirem (mrem), representing one-thousand...
Article

Sievert (SI unit)

The sievert (symbol Sv) is the SI unit of equivalent dose and effective dose. It is dimensionally equivalent to one joule per kilogram 1. Although sievert and gray (Gy) are dimensionally equivalent SI units of dose, they cannot be used interchangeably. Sievert is applicable only in context of r...
Article

Impending testicular infarction

Impending testicular infarction is a rare complication of epididymo-orchitis which can be diagnosed by absence or reversal of diastolic flow in intra-testicular arteries 1,2. Clinical presentation Patients may present with worsening of symptoms of epididymo-orchitis despite proper treatment. ...
Article

Traumatic posterior fossa subdural hematoma in neonates

Traumatic posterior fossa subdural hematoma (TPFSH) in neonates is a traumatic complication at birth. It is extremely rare. Although traumatic posterior fossa subdural hematoma is a very rare condition, it is clinically critical as it may compress the ventricular system or the brainstem and can ...
Article

Crawford and Schorry classification of congenital tibial dysplasia

The Crawford and Schorry classification, sometimes referred to simply as the Crawford classification, is used to describe congenital tibial dysplasia. Usage The Crawford and Schorry classification is mostly descriptive and does not offer much guidance on the treatment of the condition 1-3. Cl...
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Crawford classification (disambiguation)

There are two distinct and unrelated classification systems which are commonly referred to as the Crawford classification: Crawford classification thoracoabdominal aneurysms Crawford (and Schorry) classification of congenital tibial dysplasia
Article

Cardiac ischemia protocol (MRI)

The cardiac MRI ischemia or stress protocol encompasses a set of different MRI sequences for the assessment of myocardial ischemia. Note: This article aims to frame a general concept of a cardiac MRI protocol in the setting of vasodilator stress perfusion testing. Protocol specifics will vary ...
Article

Ganglioneuroma

Ganglioneuromas are fully differentiated neuronal tumors that do not contain immature elements and potentially occur anywhere along with the peripheral autonomic ganglion sites.  On imaging, usually, they present as well-defined solid masses and can be quite large at presentation. Generally, th...
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