Articles

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16,873 results found
Article

Wolman disease

Wolman disease is a rare autosomal recessive inborn error of metabolism resulting in the deposition of fats in multiple organs. This presents on imaging by hepatosplenomegaly and enlarged calcified adrenals. Clinical presentation Patients with Wolman disease typically present during the first ...
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Minimal aortic injury

Minimal aortic injury (MAI) is a mild form of blunt traumatic aortic injury which are limited to the aortic intima and are recognized more frequently due to the use of high-resolution vascular imaging in trauma. Epidemiology Minimal aortic injuries account for 10-28% of all blunt traumatic aor...
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Tracheomalacia (differential)

A dilated trachea has numerous causes, and in almost all cases represents tracheomalacia (increased size and increased compliance). As is almost always the case, various diameters have been used. Typical figures include >26 mm in men, >23 mm in women or >30 mm for both genders ref. Although ma...
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Post-primary pulmonary tuberculosis

Post-primary tuberculosis is also known as reactivation tuberculosis or secondary tuberculosis. The typical upper zone predominant destructive pneumonia is due to an adaptive immune response in an immunocompetent host 1. Pathology Location The upper zone predominance of pulmonary cavitation c...
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Valveless vein

The valveless veins are veins that lack venous valves. Most veins contain valves (known as the valvula venosa in the TA) to prevent backflow, i.e. ensuring that blood flow is always towards the heart 1. It has been shown that veins that were previously thought to be valveless actually do have v...
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Tangent sign of supraspinatus muscle belly atrophy

The tangent sign is useful in helping to quantify supraspinatus muscle belly atrophy with a positive sign implicated with a poorer outcome after supraspinatus tendon tear repair. Measurement On a sagittal oblique plane, a line is drawn between the upper surface of the scapular spine and the up...
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Rectoanal intussusception

Rectoanal intussusception refers to the telescoping or infolding of the rectal wall within the rectum itself, or into the anal canal, or externally, during defecation. Terminology Rectoanal intussusception is also termed internal intussusception and internal procidentia1 . Epidemiology Recto...
Article

Interstitial lung abnormality

Interstitial lung abnormality (ILA) refers to incidental bilateral non-dependent CT patterns including reticulation, traction bronchiectasis and honeycombing that may be symptomatic, may progress to fibrosis and portend a higher all cause mortality risk 7. Epidemiology Although may vary from p...
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Benign enhancing foramen magnum lesion

Benign enhancing foramen magnum lesions, also described as high signal lesions, are an incidental finding on 3D FLAIR MRI in a typical location in the foramen magnum just posterior to the intradural vertebral artery.  Epidemiology The prevalence of this finding was 3% in a retrospective review...
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Myocardial infarction

Myocardial infarction (MI), colloquially known as a heart attack, an acute coronary syndrome, results from interruption of myocardial blood flow and resultant ischemia and is a leading cause of death worldwide.  Epidemiology Risk factors male > females age >45 years for males >55 years for...
Article

MR tagging

Cardiac MR tagging or myocardial tagging refers to an MRI-based acquisition method designed for the analysis of myocardial deformation. Technique The method exploits tissue magnetization as a tissue property. A local magnetic saturation grid of dark-lined tissue markers known as tags are induc...
Article

Tension pneumocephalus

Tension pneumocephalus is a neurosurgical emergency that occurs when subdural air causes a mass effect over the underlying brain parenchyma, often from a ball-valve mechanism causing one-way entry of air into the subdural space 1. Clinical presentation Tension pneumocephalus has a varied clini...
Article

All-trans-retinoic acid syndrome

All-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA) syndrome, is the more common cause of differentiation syndrome 8. Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) cells respond to therapeutic levels of this normal plasma derivative of vitamin A by maturating into normal granulocytes which can cause capillary leakage and organ...
Article

Snowstorm sign (extracapsular breast implant rupture)

The snowstorm sign on breast ultrasound imaging represents the presence of free silicone droplets mixed with breast parenchymal tissue causing characteristic homogeneously hyperechoic dense shadowing with dispersion of the ultrasound beam. It is considered the most reliable sign of extracapsular...
Article

Intracerebral hemorrhage

An intracerebral hemorrhage, or intraparenchymal cerebral hemorrhage, is a subset of an intracranial hemorrhage as well as of stroke, defined by the acute accumulation of blood within the brain parenchyma. This article concerns non-traumatic intracerebral hemorrhages; traumatic hemorrhagic cere...
Article

Lipomatous hypertrophy of the interatrial septum

Lipomatous hypertrophy of the interatrial septum is a relatively uncommon disorder of the heart characterized by benign fatty infiltration of the interatrial septum. It is commonly found in elderly and obese patients as an asymptomatic incidentally discovered finding.  Epidemiology The prevale...
Article

Subacromial impingement

Subacromial impingement is the most common form of shoulder impingement and occurs secondary to attrition between the coracoacromial arch and the underlying supraspinatus tendon or subacromial bursa, leading to tendinopathy and bursitis respectively. Pathology Etiology acromial shape os acro...
Article

Brachial plexus injuries

Brachial plexus injuries are a spectrum of upper limb neurological deficits secondary to partial or complete injury to the brachial plexus, which provides the nerve supply of upper limb muscles.  Clinical presentation Trauma, usually by motor vehicle accidents, involves severe traction on the ...
Article

Vasa vasorum

The vasa vasorum represents the supporting microvasculature of the larger caliber arteries and veins of the body. Gross anatomy The vasa vasorum has two subtypes in humans 2,3: arterial vasa vasorum: arises from various arteries based on anatomical location (e.g. intercostal arteries for desc...
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Cardiac CT

Computed tomography of the heart or cardiac CT is routinely performed to gain knowledge about cardiac or coronary anatomy, to detect or diagnose coronary artery disease (CAD), to evaluate patency of coronary artery bypass grafts or implanted coronary stents or to evaluate volumetry and cardiac f...

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