Van Neck-Odelberg disease or ischiopubic osteochondritis, is a rare cause of pain in the pediatric pelvis due to late closure in synchondrosis ischiopubic, whose main symptom is an asymmetric pain that can cause a limitation in movement or limp. The different characteristics by images from simple radiography, computed tomography, MRI and bone scintigraphy scan will increase certainty diagnosis and will allow the correct differential diagnosis with fractures, posttraumatic osteolysis, infections or tumors, that leads to unnecessary invasive procedures, this being a benign disease with an evolution and improvement that occurs in weeks or months with conservative treatment. A case of a 15-year-old boy who consulted our hospital with an extra-institutional diagnosis of right ischiopubic fracture. After being evaluated by different imaging methods, a diagnosis of Van Neck-Odelberg or ischiopubic osteochondritis was made.
Background:The preferred treatment for intracranial hemangioblastomas is surgical resection with or without preoperative embolization, however, embolization remains controversial due to risks such as distal tip entrapment, vascular injury during navigation, and embolic agent migration.Case Description:A 54-year-old woman was admitted for surgical resection and preoperative embolization of a cerebellar hemangioblastoma. Although experience using Onyx with detachable and nondetachable tip microcatheters has been well reported in a variety of clinical circumstances, we describe the first case of a presurgical embolization of an intra-axial tumor using a second-generation detachable-tip microcatheter and a nonadhesive liquid embolic agent. Following the procedure, a nearly complete angiographic obliteration was achieved, as well as a successful subsequent surgical resection.Conclusion:Preoperative embolization with detachable-tip microcatheters and liquid embolic agents should be taken into consideration when assessing patients with hemangioblastomas of the posterior fossa due to the reduced risks of cardiac arrest, hemorrhage, and death.
The suspicion of mediastinal alterations, always includes in its initial study, the chest radiography. The identification of mediastinal alterations in the X-ray is a priority. The knowledge of the mediastinal references and the identification of their alterations allows the suspicion of a pathology specific to each of the mediastinal spaces. When the semiology of mediastinal lesions, their location and the three most frequent pathologies are taken into account, the possibility of having an etiological diagnosis increases[1]. This is a review article based on a detailed literature search, in which radiological mediastinal references are studied, with emphasis on the epidemiological data of each one of them.
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