High-resolution (10-MHz) ultrasonography was performed in 181 patients with primary or secondary hyperparathyroidism during a 4-year period and evaluated retrospectively. Thirty-seven unusual-appearing parathyroid tumors were found among 235 parathyroid glands identified as abnormal. There was pathologic correlation in 36. The typical appearance of parathyroid adenoma was that of an oval hypoechoic or anechoic lesion in the neck, aligned in a craniocaudal direction and often posterior to the thyroid. Morphologic variations from the norm included giant size (n = 11) (4.6%), cystic changes in a solid tumor (n = 9) (3.8%), calcified glands (n = 6[in three patients]) (2.5%), a multilobulated configuration (n = 5) (2.1%), an inhomogeneous pattern (n = 5) (2.1%), and a parathyroid cyst (n = 1) (0.4%). Recognizing the abnormal parathyroid variants can increase the diagnostic accuracy of sonographic examination.
In the United States, gunshot wounds (GSWs) have become a critical public health concern with substantial annual morbidity, disability, and mortality. Vascular injuries associated with GSW may pose a clinical challenge to the physicians in the emergency department. Patients demonstrating hard signs require immediate intervention, whereas patients with soft signs can undergo further diagnostic testing for better injury delineation. Although digital subtraction angiography is the gold standard modality to assess vascular injuries, non-invasive techniques such as Doppler ultrasound, computed tomography angiography, and magnetic resonance angiography have evolved as appropriate alternatives. This article discusses penetrating bodily vascular injuries, specifically ballistic and stab wounds, and the corresponding radiological presentations.
Penetrating vascular injury has become the topic of interest with increased gun violence in the United States. The radiologist plays a crucial role in establishing and systemizing the signs of vascular injury such as intimal flap, dissection, pseudoaneurysm, rupture, and arteriovenous fistula. Various imaging techniques such as ultrasound Doppler, computed tomographic angiography (CTA), magnetic resonance angiography, and conventional angiography are being employed based on clinical recommendations. Of all the techniques, CTA has been shown to embrace a promising role in identifying vascular injuries with superior sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy. An acquaintance of the imaging features has been shown to improve the approach to trauma patients in clinical settings. This article details the imaging modalities and the features of the head-and-neck penetrating vascular injury.
The metabolism of sulfamethazine (SMZ), which is acetylated by a binodally distributed enzyme, and procainamide (PA) was compared in 21 normal volunteers, each given a single oral dosted metabolites, N-acetyl-procainamide (NAPA) and Ac-SMZ, were measured. Subjects with less than 64% Ac-SMZ in the 0-8 hour collection were termed "slow" and those with more than 64% were termed "fast" SMZ acetylators. Slow SMZ acetylators had 9.8 to 43.8% (24.1 +/- 10.13) NAPA recovered, and fast SMZ acetylators, 22.0 to 42.6% (33.7 +/- 7.29) NAPA, P less than 0.01. In addition, the calculated half-life of PA metabolism for slow SMZ acetylators was 9.0 to 33.8 hours (18.4 +/- 8.82) and for fast SMZ acetylators was 8.1 to 14.4 hours (10.9 +/- 2.19), P less than 0.01. For four subjects, SMZ acetylation phenotype did not correlate with the half-life of SMZ or PA metabolism; and in two, SMZ acetylation phenotype and half-life of metabolism did not correlate with the same PA indices. Even though slow SMZ acetylators have less NAPA recovered than fast SMZ acetylators, it is not yet clear that procainamide is metabolized by a bimodally distributed enzyme as is sulfamethazine.
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