The most common reason for missed tumours was technical. The percentage of missed tumours in each region of the bowel correlates with the known incidence of tumours in each region and with a normal Dukes stage distribution, except in the caecum where the number of missed lesions was higher than expected.
The radiographs and clinical records of 26 patients with colorectal cancer missed on barium enema, and subsequently detected at colonoscopy, were reviewed to determine the cause of radiological error. Twenty (77%) of the patients were female. In 24 of 26 patients, anemia and/or rectal bleeding was a presenting feature. Fourteen of the 26 (54%) missed cancers were in the sigmoid colon, 10 (38%) in the ascending colon or hepatic flexure, and two (8%) in the rectum. Tumor size ranged from 20-100 mm. Fifteen were polyps, and 11 annular cancers. Fourteen (54%) were Dukes C or D tumors. Twenty-eight barium enemas in 23 patients were available for review: 86% were double-contrast studies. In 18 (76%), the cancer could be seen in retrospect and, in over half, the tumor was obvious. The dominant perceptive error was due to missing the lesion in the barium pool. Other major errors were missing the lesion en face or in overlapping loops. As most cancers were missed because of observer perceptive error, by both experienced and inexperienced radiologists, the authors recommend double reporting of all barium enemas.
Over the past few years there has been increasing awareness of the association of congenital choanal atresia (CCA) with other congenital defects, including brain abnormalities. We obtained CT scans of the brain in twenty-three consecutive patients with CCA (10 boys and 13 girls) to determine the prevalence and the scope of associated brain abnormalities. CCA was associated with known syndromes or different congenital abnormalities in 7 and 10 patients, respectively, and was an isolated finding in 6 patients. Six patients (26%) had brain abnormalities including alobar holoprosencephaly, absent corpus callosum, benign enlargement of the subarachnoid space of infancy, cerebral calcification, small right hemisphere, small ventricles and microcephaly. None of the brain abnormalities were suspected clinically. Brain abnormalities were more common in boys compared to girls (40% vs 15.4%, p = 0.18), in bilateral compared to unilateral CCA (31.3% vs 14%, p = 0.38), and in membranous compared to bony CCA (75% vs 15.7%, p = 0.02). Brain abnormalities associated with CCA may be more common than generally recognized and more so in certain subgroups of patients. Obtaining a CT scan of the brain should be considered in all patients with CCA.
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