ObjectiveTo evaluate the nature and imaging appearance of incidental enhancing breast lesions detected on a routine contrast-enhanced chest CT.Materials and MethodsTwenty-three patients with incidental enhancing breast lesions on contrast-enhanced chest CT were retrospectively reviewed. The breast lesions were reviewed by unenhanced and enhanced CT, and evaluated by observing the shapes, margins, enhancement patterns and backgrounds of breast lesions. A histopathologic diagnosis or long-term follow-up served as reference standard.ResultsSixteen (70%) patients had malignant breast lesions and seven (30%) had benign lesions. In 10 patients, the breast lesions were exclusively detected on contrast-enhanced CT. Using unenhanced CT, breast lesions with fibroglandular backgrounds were prone to be obscured (p < 0.001). Incidental primary breast cancer showed an non-significant trend of a higher percentage irregular margin (p = 0.056). All of the four incidental breast lesions with non-mass-like enhancement were proven to be malignant.ConclusionRoutine contrast-enhanced chest CT can reveal sufficient details to allow for the detection of unsuspected breast lesions, in which some cases may be proven as malignant. An irregular margin of incidental enhancing breast lesion can be considered a suggestive sign of malignancy.
Review of automated coronal reformations allows equally accurate and more rapid detection of urinary stones compared with axial images alone. In addition, coronal reformation of 64-detector computerized tomography adds value when used in conjunction with axial data sets.
Polyacrylamide hydrogel (PAAG) was widely used for injection augmentation mammoplasty in Eastern Europe and China although uncommon in the western countries. However, the safety of this procedure remained controversial. Herein, we report a 30-year-old woman with a history of augmentation mammoplasty by PAAG injection developed galactoceles during her pregnancy. Ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging showed huge cystic lesions in bilateral breasts; as a result, the normal breast tissue was almost completely replaced. On the basis of the imaging findings, the patient underwent mastectomy as well as immediate breast reconstruction with satisfactory outcome. It is important to be familiar with the imaging findings of this rare yet severe complication after augmentation mammoplasty in order to make an accurate diagnosis and a proper management.
MRI may identify most well-differentiated HCC; however, the imaging appearance is diverse. Biopsy should be performed if magnetic resonance study is inconclusive.
Purpose: To assess the relationship between temporal peritumoral enhancement and peritumoral focal fat sparing adjacent to hepatic hemangiomas.
Materials and Methods:On the basis of MRI and sonographic imaging follow-up, 51 hepatic hemangiomas were identified in 37 patients, who had both hepatic hemangiomas and focal fat-sparing areas in fatty liver. Among them, 36 tumors were associated with peritumoral focal fat spares. The association between the temporal peritumoral enhancement in the early arterial phase of dynamic MRI and peritumoral fat sparing in the same hemangioma was investigated. Furthermore, the configuration of the temporal peritumoral enhancement was correlated with that of the peritumoral focal fatsparing area. We used Chi square and Fisher's exact test for statistic analysis.Results: A total of 31 out of 36 hemangiomas (86.1%) showed both peritumoral focal fat spares and temporal peritumoral enhancement. The presence of temporal peritumoral enhancement is significantly related to that of peritumoral focal fat-sparing (P Ͻ 0.001). A total of 21 of the 31 tumors (67.7%) presented with similar configuration of the peritumoral focal fat-sparing area and temporal peritumoral enhancement area with respect to size and shape. The remaining 10 hemangiomas showed similar shape but slightly different size in these two imaging characteristics.
Conclusion:Temporal peritumoral enhancement seen in hepatic hemangioma might be related to focal fatty sparing adjacent to the hemangiomas.
Ferucarbotran MR images help in differentiating the different histologic grades of HCC but T2 PSIL could not differentiate hyperplastic nodules from well differentiated HCC. Dynamic post contrast T1-weighted images provide no additional information.
A 58-year-old male patient presented with a recurrent true malignant mixed tumor of the parotid gland. Patchy pulmonary opacities were identified with a chest radiograph. Subsequently, a CT scan of the chest showed pulmonary parenchymal consolidation with amorphous calcifications. This abnormality was confirmed to be the result of a metastatic true malignant mixed tumor by using CT-guided biopsy. The current case demonstrated an extremely rare example of atypical pulmonary metastases from a true malignant mixed tumor of the parotid gland showing an air-space pattern and calcification.
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