240 research outputs found
Round ligament varicocele
A 24-year-old pregnant woman (at 25 weeks gestation) was referred to our department because of a painless swelling in the left groin which she was feeling for one week. The swelling was more apparent in the upright position and when coughing. The swelling was reducible. Ultrasound demonstrated an anechoic structure with intralesional septa at the left inguinal area (Fig. A, longitudinal ultrasound image). The lesion augmented with the Valsalva manoeuvre and in standing position. Power Doppler confirmed the presence of venous flow (Fig. B). Inverted venous flow was seen after Valsalva (Fig. C, arrow)
Correction: Imaging Findings of the Distal Radio-Ulnar Joint in Trauma
This article details a correction to: Mespreuve, M, Vanhoenacker, F and Verstraete, K 2015 Imaging Findings of the Distal Radio-Ulnar Joint in Trauma. 'Journal of the Belgian Society of Radiology', 99(1), pp. 1–20, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/jbr-btr.846</a
Ischemic gallbladder perforation
Background: A 63-year-old woman was admitted to the department of vascular surgery with abdominal angor and hypertension. Abdominal CT angiography revealed occlusion of the celic trunk and superior mesenteric trunk and severe stenosis on the left renal artery. Stenting of the left renal artery was successfully performed. One week after the procedure, the patient was admitted at the emergency department with severe abdominal pain, which began a few hours before admission
Longitudinal cortical split sign as a potential diagnostic feature for cortical osteitis
Septic cortical osteitis is a rare but distinct type of bone infection that is characterized as a hematogenously seeded infection predominantly or exclusively limited to the cortex. Diagnosis is difficult and often delayed. Combination of clinical and laboratory findings together with the typical radiological findings consisting of vertically orientated cortical osteolysis, the ‘cortical split sign’ and the predominantly cortical disruption at the periosteal side of the cortex may lead to the correct diagnosis
Spontaneous cholecystocutaneous abscess
Spontaneous cholecystocutaneous abscesses or fistulae are rare complications of neglected biliary calculous disease which have become extremely rare during the last decades. We report a case of spontaneous cholecystocutaneous abscess in a 69-year-old male who presented with a mass in the right subcostal region. The diagnosis was made by CT scan with multiplanar reformating. Treatment consisted of incision and drainage of the abdominal wall abscess followed by cholecystectomy in a one-stage protocol
Abdominal mass due to crossed renal ectopia and fusion
Background: A 22-year-old woman was referred to the department of Radiology, because of a painless mass at the right hemiabdomen
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