The computed tomographic (CT) appearance of urachal carcinoma in ten patients was studied and compared with the pathologic findings. Magnetic resonance images were available in one case. All tumors were mucinous adenocarcinomas; four were solid, three were cystic, and three were mixed. The tumor had a characteristic location along the expected midline course of the urachus directly behind the anterior abdominal wall. The main tumor mass was supravesical in eight patients. Seven tumors contained calcification. CT correctly depicted bladder wall involvement and supravesical extent of tumor in all cases. CT provided incorrect information about invasion of the perivesical fat in three patients and about bladder mucosal invasion in two patients.
OBJECTIVE.Idiopathic localized dilatation of the ileum is a rare entity characterized by a sharply demarcated segmental dilatation of the small bowel that is in line with the and In one, the lesion was seen on a barium enema with reflux into the ileum. The mean age of patients was 52 years. In seven cases, pathologic correlation was available.In the other two patients, long-term clinical follow-up and repeat studies confirmed the diagnosis. Resected specimens showed a thin but otherwise normal wall with normal ganglion cells and nerve plexuses. Ulceration was noted in six of the seven resected cases. Two cases contained heterotopic gastric mucosa. Gi bleeding and/or anemia was the most common (77%) presenting symptom. Abdominal pain and/or obstruction was present in slightly less than half the patients (44%).RESULTS. Lesions were 6-21 cm long and 4-13 cm wide, and all were located in the ileum. The dilated segments were bilobate in three cases, multilobate in three, spherical in two, and tubular in the other. The dilated area was always in line with the long axis of the bowel, not projecting to the side. No surrounding masses were seen. Except in three patients in whom ulcers were noted, the mucosa was normal.CONCLUSION. Idiopathic localized dilatation of the ileum should be suspected whenever a sharply demarcated area of lobulated small bowel dilatation is seen in a middle-aged patient with occult Gi bleeding. The axial orientation distinguishes this condition from small bowel diverticula (including Meckel's). The lack of surrounding mass, mucosal irregularity, hypermotility, or fistulae help differentiate it from other causes of small bowel dilatation.
The aims of this study were to compare diagnostic accuracy, cost, and patient tolerance of videoesophagography and esophageal transit scintigraphy to esophageal manometry in the evaluation of nonobstructive esophageal dysphagia. Eighty-nine consecutive patients underwent videoesophagography, scintigraphy, and manometry. The sensitivities for diagnosing specific esophageal motility disorders, using esophageal manometry as the standard, were 75% and 68% for videoesophagography and scintigraphy, respectively, with positive predictive accuracies of 96% and 95% for achalasia, 100% and 67% for diffuse esophageal spasm, 100% and 75% for scleroderma, 50% and 67% for isolated LES dysfunction, 57% and 48% for nonspecific esophageal motility disorders, and 70% and 68% for normal esophageal motility. The cost for videoesophagography is less than that for either manometry or scintigraphy. Both videoesophagography and scintigraphy were better tolerated than manometry. It is concluded that videoesophagography and scintigraphy accurately diagnose primary esophageal motility disorders, achalasia, scleroderma, and diffuse esophageal spasm, but are less accurate in distinguishing nonspecific esophageal motility disorders from normal. When considering accuracy, cost, and patient acceptance, these findings suggest that videoesophagography is a useful initial diagnostic study for the evaluation of nonobstructive esophageal dysphagia.
Although laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding is considered the most minimally invasive surgical technique for the treatment of morbid obesity, the procedure has a reported overall complication rate of up to 26%. Among the various complications, gastric band erosion with intragastric band migration is the most worrisome because of the risk of subsequent obstruction, peritonitis, and sepsis. Therefore, prompt and accurate diagnosis is crucial during imaging evaluation of these patients in the late postoperative setting. In this article, we report a case of a 47-year-old woman with a gastric band that had eroded into the gastric wall with intragastric migration demonstrating classic findings on fluoroscopic and computed tomography imaging.
The potential applications of magnetic resonance imaging in the differential diagnosis of recurrent colorectal carcinoma from postoperative fibrosis are described. Correlation with computed tomographic findings is presented in 2 cases.
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