2003
DOI: 10.1590/s0102-35862003000300009
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The use of positron emission tomography in the evaluation of pleuropulmonary cancer

Abstract: Focal lung abnormalities are frequent X-ray findings and can have an infectious, inflammatory or neoplastic etiology. In the evaluation of such radiological alterations, it is important to make a distinction between benign and malignant (lung cancer) diseases. Computed tomography characterizes 25% of the lung nodules as indeterminate, requiring thoracotomy with biopsy for diagnostic clarification. FDG-PET has a 94% sensitivity and a 86% specificity in the differentiation of benign and malignant parenchymal les… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…(4) In a recent issue of this journal, Dornas et al (2) reported the case of 45-year-old male patient initially treated with a diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension secondary to chronic pulmonary thromboembolism, with no clinical response to oral anticoagulation therapy or sildenafil. In that particular case, the evidence for a diagnosis other than that of chronic pulmonary thromboembolism included identification of the mass located in the pulmonary artery (on iodinated contrast-enhanced CT) and the central location of the filling defect (on CT angiography).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(4) In a recent issue of this journal, Dornas et al (2) reported the case of 45-year-old male patient initially treated with a diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension secondary to chronic pulmonary thromboembolism, with no clinical response to oral anticoagulation therapy or sildenafil. In that particular case, the evidence for a diagnosis other than that of chronic pulmonary thromboembolism included identification of the mass located in the pulmonary artery (on iodinated contrast-enhanced CT) and the central location of the filling defect (on CT angiography).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%