Prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-ligand PET/CT is performed in patients with prostate cancer to stage the disease initially or to identify sites of recurrence after definitive therapy. 18 F-PSMA-1007 is a promising PSMA-PET tracer based on clinical results, but detailed histologic confirmation has been lacking.
Ultra-small superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIOs) were synthesized by co-precipitation of iron chloride salts with ammonia and then encapsulated with thin (~2nm) layers of silica. The particles have been characterized for size, diffraction pattern, surface charge, and magnetic properties. This rapid and economical synthesis has a number of industrial applications; however, the silica-coated particles have been optimized for use in medical applications as MR contrast agents, biosensors, DNA capturing, bioseparation and enzyme immobilization
Hyperaldosteronism due to a unilateral adenoma must be distinguished from hyperaldosteronism due to bilateral hyperplasia to enable the proper choice between surgical treatment (for adenoma) or medical treatment (for hyperplasia). To compare the efficacy of computed tomography (CT) and adrenal venous sampling, both examinations were performed in 24 patients with primary aldosteronism. All patients with a diagnosis of adenoma based on findings at venous sampling underwent adrenalectomy. The CT-based diagnosis was unilateral aldosteronoma in 17 patients and hyperplasia in seven patients. On the basis of venous sampling, unilateral adenoma was diagnosed in 22 patients; this diagnosis was confirmed by means of unilateral adrenalectomy in 21 patients. The most common error was diagnosis of hyperplasia based on the presence of bilateral nodules on CT scans: In six of seven patients with such a diagnosis, venous sampling and subsequent surgery revealed a unilateral adenoma. In hyperaldosteronism with multiple bilateral nodules, CT cannot reliably permit distinction between hyperplasia and adenoma.
In patients with juvenile idiopathic inflammatory myopathy, stair-stepping exercise induces signal intensity changes on STIR MR studies of muscle for approximately 30 minutes after exercise, in a distribution that may mimic active muscle inflammation.
A Haitian man with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), fever, malaise, and diarrhea is described. A computed tomographic (CT) scan showed a retrogastric mass with an associated ulcer. An upper gastrointestinal tract study showed an ulcer with both benign and malignant features. Endoscopy revealed a malignant-appearing ulcer, but cultures and histologic examinations of surgical biopsy specimens indicated gastric tuberculosis. The relationship between tuberculosis and AIDS is discussed.
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