We carried out a retrospective review of 75 children with unicameral bone cysts, who had sustained 52 pathological fractures, to determine which cysts were likely to be at risk and whether healing was accelerated after a fracture. Most lesions were in the metaphysis of a tubular bone, the commonest sites being the the upper part of the humerus and femur. The percentage of bone occupied by the cyst in the transverse plane was more than 85% in both anteroposterior and lateral radiographs in every case of pathological fracture. In most cases, the cyst recurred and sometimes became large without any acceleration of healing.
Objective: To evaluate the usefulness of MR computeraided detection (CAD) in patients undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy for prediction of the pathological complete response of tumours. Methods: 148 patients with breast cancer (mean age, 47.3 years; range, 29-72 years) who underwent neoadjuvant chemotherapy were included in our study. They underwent MRI before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and we reviewed the pathological result as the gold standard. The computer-generated kinetic features for each lesion were recorded, and the features analysed included "threshold enhancement" at 50% and 100% minimum thresholds; degree of initial peak enhancement; and enhancement profiles comprising lesion percentages of washout, plateau and persistent enhancement. The final pathological size and character of tumours were correlated with postchemotherapy mammography, ultrasonography and MR CAD findings. Kruskal-Wallis test and intraclass correlation coefficient were used to analyse the findings.
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