We describe a case of clear-cell adenocarcinoma of the kidney with CT evidence of fat that contradicts the rule that radiologically demonstrable fat is absent in renal carcinoma. The cyst-like appearance, egg-shell parietal calcifications, and extrarenal development of the mass suggested a preoperatively incorrect diagnosis of teratoma.
Nephrotoxicity of intravenous contrast media is more frequent and striking in patients with risk factors, the major one being preexisting chronic renal insufficiency. New nonionic low-osmolal contrast media allegedly have less nephrotoxicity than the traditional ionic high-osmolal ones. This was tested for two contrast media in a group of 18 patients with stable chronic renal insufficiency. The urinary excretion of two brush-border enzymes (alanine aminopeptidase, AAP, and γ-glutamyl transpeptidase, γ-GT) and of a lysosomal enzyme (N-acetyl-β glucosaminidase, NAG), functional markers of tubular injury, were measured before and after intravenous urography with an ionic high-osmolal radiocontrast medium, meglumine sodium diatrizoate, or with a non ionic low-osmolal one, iopamidol. Urinary NAG excretion did not change significantly after administration of either contrast media. Urinary AAP and γ-GT excretion increased significantly (p < 0.01) after diatrizoate. After iopamidol, only γ-GT excretion increased significantly (p < 0.05). Our data suggest that the nonionic low-osmolal radiocontrast medium iopamidol is less toxic to tubules than the ionic high-osmolal medium diatrizoate and that the brush-border enzymes AAP and γ-GT are sensitive markers for this toxicity.
The analytical study of the case material has allowed a precise evaluation of the distribution by age groups of the different pathologic processes of the breast, of the localization and dimensions of malignant tumors, as well as the diagnostic accuracy for those cases histologically ascertained and those with a follow-up. The diagnostic accuracy and the consequent reliability of the xeroradiographic method for the diagnosis of breast cancer is distinctly superior to that reported in the literature for traditional mammography, whereas for the differential diagnosis between circumscribed dysplastic manifestations and benign tumors xeromammography is not sufficiently reliable. The authors critically discuss the results and in particular the problem of false positives, which also include diagnostic errors that cannot be avoided in that they directly derive from the pathologic morphology of the disease process (plasma cell mastitis and sclerosing adenosis). As regards the problem of false negatives, they can be reduced within certain limits by resorting to other instrumental investigations. However, there are cases (1% of the malignant neoplasias histologically ascertained) that present a completely negative xeroradiographic finding. There are the limits of the radiologic investigation which cannot in any way be surmounted.
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