Focused appendiceal CT in which oral contrast material is used alone yields high levels of accuracy in clinically equivocal cases of acute appendicitis.
Eighty-seven examinations of the pancreas in 52 patients with acute or chronic pancreatitis and 31 examinations in 31 normal subjects were reviewed. Demonstration of the portal and splenic veins served as a guidepost to the pancreas. The normal pancreas was indistinguishable from the surrounding tissues in a substantial minority of examinations, and the ultrasonic characteristics of the normal pancreas were quite variable. Acute pancreatitis was found to be characterized by swelling, loss of internal echoes, and loss of distinction between the pancreas and splenic vein. In 50% of patients with chronic inactive pancreatitis, the pancreas could not be identified. Ultrasound should precede endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography whenever a pseudocyst might be present.
Four cases of facial neuroma confined to the cerebellopontine angle and internal auditory canal are presented. Prior to surgery, three of these were diagnosed as an acoustic tumor. At operation the true diagnosis of facial neuroma was made. The operative procedure was recorded on film and videotape. The magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) scans were reviewed retrospectively. In the first three cases the tumor was not centered on the axis of the internal auditory canal (IAC), as would be typical of an acoustic neuroma, but instead occupied a position eccentric to this axis. In one case, this eccentricity was marked. A similar appearance in the fourth case enabled the true diagnosis of facial neuroma to be made before surgery. The postoperative behavior of the tumors was unpredictable. The patient with the largest tumor, which was debulked at operation, did not develop a facial palsy. However, a patient with a small tumor which was not biopsied, developed a delayed but complete paralysis from which she subsequently recovered. This small series suggests that it may be possible, by use of the appropriate imaging technique, to diagnose, preoperatively, a cerebellopontine angle facial neuroma which is otherwise indistinguishable from an acoustic neuroma.
Forty-one patients with substantial pleural opacities on chest films were examined by A-mode and B-mode ultrasound. Ultrasonic examination provides an accurate means of differentiating pleural fluid from other conditions which produce such opacities and is superior to the chest films as a means of localizing fluid. With the gain setting used in this series, fluid collections less than 1 cm thick were missed and were probably obscured by reverberation from the ribs. M-mode scanning provides a simple and accurate means of localizing the diaphragm in nearly all patients, almost completely eliminating difficulties caused by subdiaphragmatic placement of the thoracocentesis needle.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.