| Current Issue Volume 2 (2) February 2009 |
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Authors: Ahmet Tuncay Turgut1, Kemal Ödev2, Adnan Kabaaliolu3, Shweta Bhatt4 and Vikram S. Dogra4
1 Department of Radiology, Ankara Training and Research Hospital, Ankara, Turkey.
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Department of Radiology, Meram Faculty of Medicine, Selçuk University, Konya, Turkey.
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Department of Radiology, Faculty of Medicine, Akdeniz University, Antalya, Turkey.
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Department of Imaging Sciences, University of Rochester School of Medicine, 601 Elmwood Ave., Box 648, Rochester, NY 14642. |
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OBJECTIVE: Hydatid involvement of the kidney accounts for only 2-4% of all cases of hydatid disease. The purpose of this article is to review the imaging features of hydatid disease of the kidney and thus show the role of radiography, excretory urography, sonography, CT, and MRI in the diagnosis of hydatidosis.
CONCLUSION: The radiologist should be familiar with the imaging findings of hydatid disease because early diagnosis is important for more appropriate treatment.
Keywords: CT - hydatid cyst - kidney - MRI - sonography |
| Date: February 2009 |
DOI:10.2214/AJR.08.1129 | AJR 2009; 192:462-467 |
| © American Roentgen Ray Society |
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Authors:Moodie1,2, MH Cherk3, E Lau1, A Turlakow3, S Skinner3, RJ Hicks1, MJ Kelly3 and V Kalff3
1 The Centre for Molecular Imaging and
2 Department of Radiology, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, and
3 Department of Nuclear Medicine, The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Correspondence to Associate Professor Victor Kalff, Department of Nuclear Medicine, The Alfred Hospital, Commercial Road, Melbourne, Vic. 3004, Australia.
Email: victor.kalff@med.monash.edu.au
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Dedicated positron emission tomography (PET)/CT scanners using BGO and related detectors (d-PET) have become standard imaging instruments in many malignancies. Hybrid gamma camera systems using NaI detectors in coincidence mode (g-PET) have been compared to d-PET but reported usefulness has been variable when gamma cameras with half-inch to three-fourth-inch thick crystals have been used without CT. Our aim was to compare g-PET with a 1-in.-thick crystal and inbuilt CT for lesion localization and attenuation correction (g-PET/CT) and d-PET/CT in patients presenting with potential and confirmed lung malignancies. One hour after (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG), patients underwent BGO d-PET/CT from jaw to proximal thigh. This was followed by one to two bed position g-PET/CT 194 +/- 27 min after FDG. Each study pair was independently analysed with concurrent CT. d-PET/CT was interpreted by a radiologist experienced in both PET and CT, and g-PET/CT by consensus reading of an experienced PET physician and an experienced CT radiologist. A TNM score was assigned and studies were then unblinded and compared. Fifty-seven patients underwent 58 scan pairs over 2 years. Eighty-nine per cent concordance was shown between g-PET/CT and d-PET/CT for the assessment of intrapulmonary lesions, with 100% concordance for intrapulmonary lesions >10 mm (36 of 36). Eighty-eight per cent (51 of 58) concordance was shown between g-PET/CT and d-PET/CT for TNM staging. Coincidence imaging using an optimized dual-head 1-in.-thick crystal gamma camera with inbuilt CT compares reasonably well with dedicated PET/CT for evaluation of indeterminate pulmonary lesions and staging of pulmonary malignancies and may be of some value when d-PET/CT is not readily available. |
| Date: February 2009 |
DOI: 10.1111/j.1754-9485.2009.02034 | Journal of medical imaging and radiation oncology 53(1):32-9 |
| © American Roentgen Ray Society |
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