Characteristic HRCT findings of both bacterial and atypical pneumonia were demonstrated. These HRCT features seemed to reflect pathologic findings and the manner of lesional progression. This information may support the appropriate antibiotic therapy in medical practice.
Transient increased attenuation in the liver had a variable appearance at dynamic arterial-phase CT in most patients with gallbladder disease. This attenuation was most likely due to increased blood flow from the hepatobiliary system.
We present fourteen patients with an abnormal extrapulmonary accumulation on lung perfusion scintigraphy with 99mTc-macroaggregated albumin (MAA), who were examined during the last decade. These included six patients with lung cancer, four with pulmonary arterio-venous fistula, two with congenital heart disease, one with inferior vena cava (IVC) syndrome and one with congenital bronchogenic cyst. All six patients with lung cancer had superior vena cava (SVC) syndrome, and the tumor invaded the thoracic wall. As causes of abnormal accumulation, fourteen patients had a right-to-left shunt, and one patient with IVC syndrome had a systemic vein-to-portal vein shut, and one patient with lung cancer associated with superior vena cava (SVC) syndrome had both right-to-left and systemic vein-to-portal vein shunts. In the two patients with systemic vein-to-portal vein shunts, a hot spot was observed at the hepatic hilum, and radionuclide venography revealed remarkably developed collateral pathways to the portal vein. An extrapulmonary accumulation seen on 99mTc-MAA lung perfusion scan therefore indicates the existence of unusual hemodynamics with a shunt. We should therefore be careful not to overlook this peculiar finding.
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