205 research outputs found

    Current practice and new insights in thyroid ultrasound

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    Thyroid nodules are common and detected in 2–6% in the adult population by palpation. This prevalence increased to 40–60% with the use of ultrasound. Thyroid cancer is rare, with 1020 new cancers (751 women and 287 male) registered in 2019 in Belgium [1]. Ultrasound imaging represents the cornerstone for the thyroid nodule work-up and has benefited from significant improvements in recent years. We succinctly focus on how to evaluate thyroid nodules using ultrasonography and how to use the European Thyroid Imaging and Reporting Data System (EU-TIRADS score). We will also review the possible added value of complementary ultrasound techniques such as high-resolution colour Doppler ultrasound and elastography. Further, we discuss how to select at-risk nodules to benefit from fine-needle aspiration cytology and finally we briefly review new techniques for the treatment of thyroid nodules and the role of artificial intelligence in thyroid nodule classification

    Intrathoracic Caecal Perforation Presenting as Dyspnea

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    Introduction. Bochdalek hernia is a congenital defect of the diaphragm that is usually diagnosed in the neonatal period and incidentally in asymptomatic adults. Small bowel incarceration in a right-sided Bochdalek hernia is exceptional for an adult. Case Presentation. A 54-year-old woman was admitted for acute dyspnea, tachycardia, hypotension, and fever. Five days before, she had been experiencing an episode of diffuse abdominal pain. The admission chest X-ray was interpreted as right pleural effusion and pneumothorax with left mediastinal shift. Chest tube drainage was purulent. The thoracoabdominal CT examination suspected an intestinal incarceration through a right diaphragmatic defect. At laparotomy, a right-sided Bochdalek hernia was confirmed with a complete necrosis of the incarcerated caecum. Ileocaecal resection was performed, but the patient died from delayed septic complications. Conclusion. Intrathoracic perforation of the caecum is a rare occurrence; delayed diagnosis due to misleading initial symptoms may lead to severe complications and poor prognosis

    CT and MRI Aspects of an Abdominal Hemophilic Pseudotumor

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    We report the computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) aspects of a rare case of a patient with a large abdominal hemophilic pseudotumor, a chronic, encapsulated, slowly expanding hematoma occurring in severe hemophilia, without involvement of iliopsoas muscles and iliac bones

    Assessment of lung tumor response by perfusion CT

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    Perfusion CT permits evaluation of lung cancer angiogenesis and response to therapy by demonstrating alterations in lung tumor vascularity. It is advocated that perfusion CT performed shortly after initiating therapy may provide a better evaluation of physiological changes rather than the conventional size assessment obtained with RECIST. The radiation dose,the volume of contrast medium delivered to the patient and the reproducibility of blood flow parameters remain an issue for this type of investigation

    Colorectal cancer screening: an absolute necessity and an imminent reality in the French community

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    Colorectal cancer is a true problematic of public health. The screening is an absolute necessity. An ambitious program of screening is launched in French Community. Faecal occult blood test (FOBT) will be proposed to average risk patients in general population. A total colonoscopy will be performed if FOBT will be positive. First step colonoscopy will be proposed to high or very high risk patients. General practitioners are in the core of the multidisciplinary program

    Screening for lung cancer with low-dose CT.

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    Lung cancer represents the leading cause of cancer-related mortality in the world. In the past, many attempts were made to detect the disease at an early stage and subsequently reduce its mortality. Chest X-ray was abandoned for this purpose. For several years low-dose computed tomography has been introduced as a potential tool for early screening in a high-risk population. As demonstrated in several papers, the task is not easy and researchers are faced with many difficulties.This paper reviews mainly the role of low-dose CT for early cancer screening. Results of past and current trials, controversies related to the high rate of lung nodules, cost-effectiveness, and delivered radiation dose to the patient are presented. Finally some limitations of low dose CT for lung cancer detection are explained

    Evaluation of multislice spiral CT for the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism

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    Pulmonary embolism (PE) is a severe frequent disease with lack of specific symptoms and represents a major diagnostic challenge. In the past few years, single-slice spiral CT angiography has gained acceptance as a minimally invasive method of evaluating patients with suspicion of PE. The main limitation of single-slice spiral CT resides in the poor detection of subsegmental or more distal PE. This limited detection is not explained by an insufficient vascular distension during spiral CT acquisition but probably by an insufficient spatial resolution. Moreover, in some situations spiral CT is penalized by pulmonary angiography which is an imperfect gold standard. Today Multislice CT can acquire 2 up to 64 slices in a single rotation with isotropic resolution. This technique can cover the entire chest in 1-mm slice thickness or less, in one short breath-hold and allows a better analysis of peripheral pulmonary arteries with a better depiction of sub-segmental and peripheral clots. It also reduces or eliminates artefacts produced by patient movement and decreases the x-ray tube heating that can constrain singleslice scanning parameters. Acquisition of the lower extremities can be performed after chest CT, allowing detection of deep vein thrombosis and one stop shopping of the venous thromboembolic disease. The diagnostic accuracy of multislice CT is probably similar or superior to pulmonary angiography with an inferior delivered radiation dose, a better detection of alternative diagnoses and a continuous decrease of contrast medium injected. Last refinements in CT technology opens new frontiers for a functional approach of PE and predict its prognosis. For all the above-mentioned reasons, it seems obvious that multislice CT will definitively replace pulmonary angiography for diagnostic purposes and will represent a superb tool to better understand the physiopathology of this frequent and potentially life-threatening disorder.(MED 3) -- UCL, 200

    La fièvre

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