In an effort to improve preoperative evaluation of tumors of the tongue, a prospective study on the value of ultrasound (US) for the staging of 50 surgically proven cancers of the tongue and floor of mouth was performed. Sonography was correlated with clinical staging and surgical outcome. Real-time high-frequency transducers and an echo-free silicone interface were used. The dorsal and middle thirds of the tongue were scanned from a submental access and the tip of the tongue directly. US accurately defined tumor sizes and locations in all cases. US staged cancers correctly in all cases but one. In contrast, clinical staging was correct in only 66% of cases. Surgically relevant details, such as crossing of the midline of the tongue or infiltration of the lateral pharyngeal wall, were detected with US. The major limitations of US include the nonvisualization of the epiglottis and retropharyngeal space as well as bone infiltration.
One hundred one patients with renal allografts were studied by two independent observers using duplex Doppler sonography (DDS) and color-coded Doppler sonography (CCDS). In all patients, single or multiple percutaneous needle biopsies of the transplant had been performed 1 to 30 days before. In 6 patients CCDS following the biopsy demonstrated an area of combined red and blue color-coded blood flow within the renal parenchyma (n = 5) or within the sinus (n = 1); the Doppler waveform was abnormal in these areas with signals above and below the zero line indicating turbulent blood flow. Consecutive intraarterial digital subtraction angiography (DSA) revealed the presence of an arteriovenous fistula (n = 4) or of a pseudoaneurysm (n = 2). In one patient, gross hematuria with obstruction of the bladder occurred as a complication of a pseudoaneurysm within the renal sinus; the bleeding could not be stopped by embolization of the lesion and the kidney had to be removed. DDS demonstrated the lesion in only one of the six patients. Thus, CCDS is the method of choice for noninvasive detection of vascular lesions due to percutaneous biopsy.
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