Objective To evaluate the technical and oncological efficacy of an image‐guided cryoablation programme for renal tumours. Patients and Methods A prospective analysis of technical and radiological outcomes was undertaken after treatment of 171 consecutive tumours in 147 patients. Oncological efficacy in a subset of 125 tumours in 104 patients with >6 months' radiological follow‐up and a further subset of 62 patients with solitary, biopsy‐proven renal carcinoma was also analysed. Factors influencing technical success, as determined by imaging follow‐up, and complication rates were statistically analysed using a statistics software package and logistic regression analyses. Results No variables were found to predict subtotal treatment, although gender (P = 0.08), tumour size of >4 cm (P = 0.09) and central location of tumour (P = 0.07) approached significance. Upper pole location was the single variable that was found to predict complications (P = 0.006). Among the 104 patients (125 tumours), radiologically assessed at ≥6 months and with a mean radiological follow‐up of 20.1 months, we found a single case of unexpected late local recurrence. Conclusion Percutaneous image‐guided cryoablation, at a mean of 20.1 months' follow‐up, appears to provide a safe and effective treatment option with a low complication rate. Anteriorly sited tumours should not be considered a contraindication for percutaneous image‐guided cryoablation.
Microvascular obstruction (MVO) is usually seen in a proportion of patients with acute myocardial infarction following reperfusion therapy of an occluded coronary artery. It is characterized by damage and dysfunction of the myocardial microvasculature with a no-reflow phenomenon within the infarct zone. While MVO may be demonstrated via a number of different imaging modalities, cardiac MR (CMR) enables accurate identification of MVO and also permits assessment of infarct extent and overall left ventricular function during the same imaging examination. We present a pictorial review of the characteristic appearances of MVO on CMR and highlight the importance of this imaging diagnosis for patient outcome following acute myocardial infarction.
Incidental coronary and cardiac calcification are frequent findings on non-gated thoracic computed tomography (CT). We recommend that the heart is reviewed on all CT scans where it is visualised. Coronary artery calcification is a marker of coronary artery disease and it is associated with an adverse prognosis on dedicated cardiac imaging and on non-gated thoracic CT performed for non-cardiac indications, both with and without contrast. We recommend that CAC is reported on all non-gated thoracic CT using a simple patient-based score (none, mild, moderate, severe). Furthermore, we recommend that reports include recommendations for subsequent management, namely the assessment of modifiable cardiovascular risk factors and, if the patient has chest pain, assessment as per standard guidelines. In most cases this will not necessitate additional investigations. Incidental aortic valve calcification may also be identified on non-gated thoracic CT and should be reported, along with ancillary findings such as aortic root dilation. Calcification may occur in other parts of the heart including mitral valve/annulus, pericardium and myocardium, but in many cases these are an incidental finding without clinical significance.
BackgroundCOPD patients have increased risk of developing pneumonia, which is associated with poor outcomes. It can be symptomatically indistinguishable from exacerbations, making diagnosis challenging. Studies of pneumonia in COPD have focused on hospitalised patients and are not representative of the ambulant COPD population. Therefore, we sought to determine the incidence and aetiology of acute exacerbation events with evidence of pneumonic radiographic infiltrates in an outpatient COPD cohort.MethodsOne hundred twenty-seven patients with moderate to very severe COPD aged 42–85 years underwent blood and sputum sampling over one year, at monthly stable visits and within 72 h of exacerbation symptom onset. 343 exacerbations with chest radiographs were included.Results20.1% of exacerbations had pneumonic infiltrates. Presence of infiltrate was highly seasonal (Winter vs summer OR 3.056, p = 0.027). In paired analyses these exacerbation events had greater increases in systemic inflammation. Bacterial detection rate was higher in the pneumonic group, with Haemophilus influenzae the most common bacteria in both radiological groups. Viral detection and sputum microbiota did not differ with chest radiograph appearance.ConclusionsIn an outpatient COPD cohort, pneumonic infiltrates at exacerbation were common, and associated with more intense inflammation. Bacterial pathogen detection and lung microbiota were not distinct, suggesting that exacerbations and pneumonia in COPD share common infectious triggers and represent a continuum of severity rather than distinct aetiological events.Trial registrationTrial registration Number: NCT01360398.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (10.1186/s12931-018-0842-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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