Penile fracture is a rare injury to the penis caused by blunt trauma. The presence of urethral injuries sustained during fracture is less than 10%, but very few cases involve complete circumferential urethral transection. We present a case of a patient who presented with traumatic penile fracture involving bilateral corporal cavernosa injury and complete urethral transection.
Background: Incidental findings are a well-known complication of imaging studies done for both diagnostic and research purposes. Little is known about the rates and types of incidental findings found on brain MRI in patients with HIV infection, who may be at risk for HIV-Associated Neurocognitive Disorders (HAND). Methods: The parent study included 108 adults with HIV infection and 125 demographically-matched uninfected controls who completed MRI and neuropsychological testing. Incidental findings were classified by the study team as vascular, neoplastic, congenital, other neurologic, or non-neurologic. Categorical measures were compared using Pearson chi-square tests; continuous measures were compared using t-tests. Results: Among participants with HIV infection, 36/108 (33%) had incidental findings compared to 33/125 (26%) controls (p = 0.248). Rates of incidental findings were significantly correlated with increasing age in both participants with HIV infection (p = 0.013) and controls (p = 0.022). We found no correlation between presence of incidental findings and sex or race/ethnicity among either cohort, and no correlation with CD4 count or HAND status for the HIV-infected cohort. Conclusions: Incidental findings were common in both participants with HIV infection and controls, at higher rates than previously reported in healthy populations. there was no significant difference in prevalence between the groups.
Primary prostate squamous cell malignancies are rare and very aggressive. A 65-year-old man presented to our institution with clinical and radiographic findings concerning for advanced prostatic malignancy. Surgical pathology of the tumor revealed poorly differentiated carcinoma with squamous differentiation, and histopathological markers were positive for markers of squamous differentiation negative for all urothelial and prostatic markers.
BackgroundHIV infection is associated with an array of neurocognitive changes, collectively referred to as HIV-Associated Neurocognitive Disorder (HAND). These changes have been the subject of a great deal of study, often including structural MRI of the brain. Incidental findings (IF) are a well-known complication of imaging studies done for both diagnostic and research indications, and can pose important ethical and clinical dilemmas. Little is known about the rates and types of IF found on brain MRI in patients with HIV infection. We identified and characterized such findings in participants who participated in a study of neurophysiological markers of HAND.MethodsThe parent study included 108 HIV-infected adults and 125 demographically matched uninfected controls without cognitive impairment who had undergone T1-weighted structural brain MRI for research purposes. Demographic and diagnostic data were abstracted from the research records. Each MRI study was read by the same neuroradiologist, blind to the participant’s HIV status. IF were classified as vascular, neoplastic, congenital, other neurologic, or non-neurologic. Categorical measures were compared using Pearson chi-square tests while continuous measures were compared using t-tests.ResultsAmong HIV-infected participants, 36/108 (33.3%) had IF compared with 33/125 (26.4%) of controls (P = 0.248). Rates of IF were significantly correlated with increased age in both HIV-infected and control participants. We found no correlation among presence or absence of IF and sex, race/ethnicity, or CD4 count and HAND status for the HIV-infected cohort. The most common categories were neurologic (27), followed by non-neurologic (8), vascular (6), and neoplastic (2) (Table 1).ConclusionIf were common in both HIV-infected participants and controls, at higher rates than previously reported, possibly because of increased sensitivity of MRI machines over time. Surprisingly, we found no significant difference between the groups and no correlation with HAND status or CD4 count. Age was the only factor correlated with rates of IF in either HIV-infected participants or controls. To our knowledge, this study is the first of its kind to characterize incidental findings in HIV-infected patients.
Disclosures
All authors: No reported disclosures.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.