Very high frequency (13 MHz) ultrasonographic examination of the neck successfully visualized one or more normal lymph nodes (weakly echoic oval structures with an echoic central hilum) in 67.6% of 1000 healthy volunteers. Efficacy was not related to recent ear, nose, and throat infection, sex, or age. The longitudinal‐transverse diameter ratio was greater than or equal to 2 in 86.2% of cases. No signal was detected with color Doppler imaging. One or more thyroid nodules were also identified in 34.7% of the subjects: the frequency was 44% in women and 42% in subjects over 50 years of age.
The aim of this retrospective study was to prove the effectiveness of percutaneous cementoplasty in pelvic bone metastases. We studied the data entered in a multicenter prospective database on 18 cancer patients (average age 58 years) who underwent percutaneous computed tomography (CT) or fluoroscopy-guided cementoplasty from September 1996 to September 1998. The metastatic sites were: acetabulum (n = 12), iliac bone (n = 2), and sacrum (n = 4). Indications were pain recurrence (n = 9) or no relief (n = 3) after radiotherapy, and 6 procedures were performed before radiation. Mean follow-up was 4.6 months, ranging from 11 days up to 24 months. Improvement in pain and walking was obtained in 81.8% cases, and it was generally maintained, except in 1 patient who experienced pain again at day 15 because of an acetabular fracture. Percutaneous cementoplasty is a safe and efficient technique, and is mandatory when radiotherapy fails or when rapid resolution of pain is requested.
No therapy is currently available for patients with recurrent vascular obstruction of the superior vena cava (SVC) caused by tumor regrowth after chemotherapy or radiation therapy. Intravascular stenting is a new option for the treatment of vena cava syndrome. Forty cancer patients with SVC syndrome (SVCS) were evaluated by computed tomography (CT) and venography. The SVC or its tributaries were stenosed or thrombosed in all patients. The etiology was malignant in all but 2 cases: non-small-cell lung carcinoma (n = 28), mediastinal nodal metastasis (n = 5), lymphoma (n = 2), pleural mesothelioma (n = 2), small-cell lung carcinoma (n = 1), and postradiation fibrous mediastinitis (n = 2). Stenting was achieved in 39 of the 40 patients, and clinical symptoms subsided in 92%. Stents remained patent in 36 of these 39 patients throughout a mean follow-up of 24 weeks (range 3 days to 24 months). SVC stenting is safe, effective and allows rapid cure of SVCS and port catheter implantation in patients in poor health.
This text reviews the normal ultrasound (US) anatomy of the salivary glands along with tumoral, lithiasic, and inflammatory pathologies. For salivary gland tumors, US does have limitations (failure to visualize the entire parotid gland, relations with the nerve plexus, in-depth spread of large tumors, false-negative errors of malignancy for small encapsulated tumors). However, US is a simple technique allowing correct identification of the benign nature of a lesion in over 80% of the cases. For lesions under 3 cm in diameter, US is generally the only imaging technique used; for larger lesions, CT or MR is required. Sialolithiasis and inflammatory diseases are being documented by US more and more and the indications for sialography have strongly decreased.
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