Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging was performed on 64 patients with 109 vertebral compression fractures, the cause of which could not be determined from plain radiographs. Twenty-five fractures were due to malignancy; 84 were caused by a benign process. In 22 of the 25 fractures caused by malignancy, MR images showed complete replacement of normal bone marrow, whereas 47 of the 61 benign fractures without history of trauma had complete preservation of normal bone marrow. The remaining 14 benign fractures had incompletely preserved bone marrow in a regular pattern. In two of the three remaining malignant fractures, the bone marrow replacement also was incomplete but with an irregular pattern. In cases of recent trauma or primary bone marrow abnormalities, the configuration and signal of remaining bone marrow were not useful in differentiating among malignancy, osteoporosis, and other benign processes. When criteria based on complete loss or preservation of marrow and marrow configuration in cases of incomplete loss were used, the accuracy in differentiating benign from malignant fractures was 94%. MR imaging may be a useful adjunct in differentiating benign from metastatic fractures and may provide information not available with other imaging methods.
The authors reviewed 55 pairs of chest radiographs and computed tomographic (CT) studies obtained in 33 febrile bone marrow transplant (BMT) recipients. The images were read separately, without knowledge of the clinical diagnosis. Twenty-one episodes of fungal infection were documented. One chest radiograph showed a pneumonia-like opacity, and 17 showed nodular opacities, five with cavitation. In 20 of 21 episodes, CT showed nodules with cavitation (n = 7), halo (n = 4), hazy margin (n = 5), air bronchogram (n = 2), cluster of fluffy nodules (n = 1), or sharp margin (n = 1). In none of the nine bacteremic episodes, however, were there opacities on chest radiographs or CT studies. CT studies demonstrating complicated nodules in febrile BMT patients strongly suggest a fungal infection, whereas negative CT studies suggest bacteremia or non-filamentous fungal infection of nonpulmonary origin. CT appears to add useful information to radiographic analysis during the assessment of febrile episodes in BMT patients, especially when invasive diagnostic procedures pose a high risk.
The purposes of this study were to determine the origin and nature of normal lower limb venous Doppler flow phasicity and to assess normal and respiratory variations. SUBJECTS AND METHODS. The common femoral veins of 12 healthy volunteers (three men and nine women; age range. 21-50 years; mean. 29 years) were evaluated by detailed spectral Doppler examinations with simultaneous ECG and respirometric tracings. The examinations were performed using a 5-or 7-MHz linear-array transducer with breath held in mid respiration. at the end of deep expiration, at the end of deep inspiration. during Valsalva's
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