Articles

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More than 200 results
Article

Technetium-99m agents

Technetium agents based on the technetium-99m (Tc-99m) radioisotope are frequently used agents in medical imaging. A radiopharmaceutical labeled with Tc-99m constitutes a co-ordination complex in which ligands bond to a central atom of Tc-99m by co-ordinate covalent bonds 4 . The radioactive te...
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Pseudo-Meigs syndrome

Pseudo-Meigs syndrome refers to a clinical syndrome of pleural effusion and ascites associated with an ovarian tumor that is not a fibroma or a fibroma-like tumor. Pathology Entities that have been reported to result in pseudo Meigs syndrome include Krukenberg tumors colon carcinoma metastas...
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Photoluminescence

Photoluminescence is a type of luminescence in which energy source for material to absorb, store and convert to light are electromagnetic radiation. Photoluminescent materials have important applications in radiology. Types Fluorescence refers to the near instantaneous emission of light follow...
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Jejunoileal diverticulitis

Jejunoileal diverticulitis (plural diverticulitides), an acute inflammation of diverticula of the jejunum or ileum, is much rarer than colonic diverticulitis. Epidemiology The jejunum is a more common site of acquired diverticula of the small bowel than the ileum 1. Clinical presentation Div...
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Small intestine diverticular disease

Small intestine diverticular disease is an uncommon form of diverticular disease and can be classified into disease affecting the: Meckel diverticulum Meckel diverticulitis non Meckel diverticular disease duodenum - duodenal diverticulosis duodenal diverticulitis jejunum and ileum - jejuno...
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Gastrinoma

Gastrinomas are the second most common pancreatic endocrine tumor and the most common type in the setting of multiple endocrine neoplasia type I (MEN I). Epidemiology Most gastrinomas are sporadic, although some are seen in the setting of multiple endocrine neoplasia type I (MEN I). In general...
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Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1

Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1), also known as Wermer syndrome, is an autosomal dominant genetic disease that results in proliferative lesions in multiple endocrine organs, particularly the pituitary gland, pancreas, and parathyroid glands.  There are other multiple endocrine neoplas...
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Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors

Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (pNET), also known as endocrine tumors of the pancreas, arise from pancreatic ductal stem cells and include some distinct tumors that match the cell type of origin.  Terminology Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors have commonly been referred to as "islet cell tumo...
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Parathyroid adenoma

Parathyroid adenomas are benign tumors of the parathyroid glands and are the most common cause of primary hyperparathyroidism. Epidemiology Associations There is an association with multiple endocrine neoplasia types I (MEN1) and IV (MEN4). Clinical presentation Patients typically present w...
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Pituitary microadenoma

Pituitary microadenomas are a minority of all pituitary adenomas but can pose imaging and management challenges on account of their size and protean clinical presentations.  By definition, a microadenoma is less than 10 mm in size. If the same tumor is greater than 10 mm in size, it is then con...
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Zollinger-Ellison syndrome

Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) is a clinical syndrome that occurs secondary to elevated gastrin levels produced by a gastrinoma.  Clinical presentation The syndrome presents with abdominal pain but can also present with diarrhea or other complaints as well. Diagnosis is often delayed by 5-7 ...
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Mass attenuation coefficient

The mass attenuation coefficient (MAC) is a quantity used in calculations involving the penetration and energy deposition of photons (such as X-rays and gamma rays) in various materials, including biological tissues and shielding substances. Definition The MAC is defined as the linear attenuat...
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Half-value layer

Half-value layer (HVL) is the thickness of a material required to reduce the air kerma of an X-ray or gamma-ray beam to half its original value. HVL is most accurately measured under narrow-beam geometry, as broad-beam setups allow scatter to reach the detector, leading to an underestimation of ...
Article

Linear attenuation coefficient

Linear attenuation coefficient (µ) is a constant that describes the fraction of attenuated incident photons in a monoenergetic beam per unit thickness of a material 1. It includes all possible interactions including coherent scatter, Compton scatter and photoelectric effect 1. Its complement is ...
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Heterozygous HTRA1-related cerebral small vessel disease

Heterozygous HTRA1-related cerebral small vessel disease, also known as cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy type 2 (CADASIL2), is a very rare monogenic cerebral small vessel disease. Heterozygous HTRA1-related cerebral small vessel disease ...
Article

Hip dislocation

Hip dislocation is a relatively rare entity and may be congenital or acquired. It has a relatively high morbidity. Epidemiology Hip dislocations account for ~5% of all dislocations 3.  Pathology There are numerous patterns of dislocation 1,9: posterior hip dislocation (most common ~85%) a...
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Tuberculum-venous confluence line

The tuberculum-venous confluence line is a midsagittal line formed by the interconnection between the Galenic venous confluence (which includes the internal cerebral veins, the mesencephalic veins, and the basal veins of Rosenthal) and the tuberculum sella 1. This is an artificial reference lin...
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Small bowel follow-through

Small bowel follow-through is a fluoroscopic technique designed to obtain high-resolution images of the small bowel. The motility of the small bowel can also be grossly evaluated. Indications The small bowel follow-through can be useful for the evaluation of: strictures obstruction divertic...
Article

Incisural line

The incisural line is a midsagittal line connecting the Galenic venous confluence point (which includes the internal cerebral veins, the mesencephalic veins, and the basal veins of Rosenthal) with the base of the dorsum sella 1. It is a fixed anatomically-based line of reference at the tentoria...
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Marshall classification of traumatic brain injury

The Marshall classification of traumatic brain injury is a CT scan-derived metric using only a few features and has been shown to predict outcomes in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI).  Usage This system was first published in 1992 1, building on findings from a large cohort of head i...
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