45 research outputs found

    3-Dimensional Mapping and Radiofrequency Ablation of Atrial Flutter in a Patient with Interrupted Inferior Vena Cava

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    The presence of isolated interrupted inferior vena cava (IVC) is very rare. Though the occurrence of typical atrial flutter in this setting has recently been described, the use of 3-dimensional activation mapping to aid the management of such patients has not yet been described. We report the successful ablation of this arrhythmia in a 63-year-old woman using the superior route through the internal jugular vein with the help of a mapping system.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/46349/1/10840_2005_Article_4512.pd

    Interruption of the inferior vena cava with anomalous intrahepatic continuation

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    Acute abdomen due to gastric volvulus: diagnostic value of a single plain radiograph

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    Intrahepatic portosystemic venous shunt: diagnosis by colour/power Doppler imaging and three-dimensional ultrasound

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    Intrahepatic portosystemic venous shunt, considered to be a rare disease, can lead to hepatic encephalopathy. With recent advances in diagnostic imaging techniques, the number of reports of intrahepatic portosystemic venous shunts identified incidentally in patients without symptoms are increasing. We report an intrahepatic portosystemic venous shunt that was diagnosed incidentally by real-time ultrasound and colour Doppler imaging, including the use of three-dimensional ultrasound using minimum intensity projections and power Doppler

    Computed tomography and angiographic findings of childhood moyamoya disease

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    Moyamoya disease is a rare entity consisting of bilateral stenosis or occlusion of internal carotid arteries with abnormal collateral vessels at the base of the brain. We present five Turkish children with this disease, which is more common in Japan. Focal neurologic deficits and/or epilepsy were the common presenting symptoms in two girls and three boys between the ages of 1.5 and 11 years. Multiple cerebral infarcts were diagnosed in all of the cases by Computed Tomography (CT). Abnormal net-like vessels at the base of the brain were detected in three patients. Cerebral angiography, which is necessary to confirm the diagnosis, showed moyamoya vessels and bilateral stenosis or occlusion of the internal carotid arteries in all cases. Although the angiographic staging was advanced in three patients, neither clinical status nor parenchymal abnormalities detected with CT were different from the other two cases

    Pelvic kidney with an unusual blood supply: angiographic findings

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    A right pelvic kidney was observed in a patient, who presented with hypertension. On angiograms, the left kidney was normally positioned and had a single renal artery, whereas the right pelvic kidney received three arteries, which arose from bilateral common iliac arteries and from ipsilateral internal iliac artery. The renal arteries from the ipsilateral internal iliac artery and the contralateral common iliac artery supplied the medial half of the pelvic kidney. In the present case, the blood supply from both the right and left sides appeared to be related to the medial position of the right pelvic kidney. As the incidence of unilateral renal ectopia is not extremely low, it is possible to encounter in a surgical or cancer treatment case. Variations in the positional anatomy of the kidney and its vascular supply are of clinical importance and our case illustrates a different kind of blood supply that a pelvic kidney may possess

    Pneumatised superior turbinate: A common anatomic variation?

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    Anatomic variations are important in preendoscopic CT evaluation of the paranasal sinuses. In this study, we investigated whether the superior turbinate could become pneumatised like the middle turbinate, pneumatisation of which is well-known. Images of 52 patients who underwent CT examination prior to endoscopic sinus surgery and who had normally aerated posterior ethmoidal cells and an unobscured nasal cavity were retrospectively evaluated. The patients were 12-68 years old (median age, 35 years); 28 were women and 24 were men. Pneumatisation of the superior turbinates was graded in two groups as minimal or marked. Pneumatisation was evident in 25 patients (48%). 13 unilateral (25%), 8 bilateral (15%) pneumatisations were detected in the group graded as minimal, whereas 1 unilateral and 3 bilateral pneumatisations were present in the markedly (8%) pneumatised group of patients. Superior turbinates were seemingly aerated through the posterior ethmoid cells. The superior turbinates can be pneumatised as the middle turbinate is a not frequent anatomic variation that should be taken into account in preendoscopic CT evaluation of the paranasal sinuses

    Absence of the common bile duct and junction of the cystic duct with the left hepatic duct in a patient with chronic portal vein thrombosis

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    A 50-year-old male patient was admitted to the hospital because of fatigue and a palpable abdominal mass. The diagnoses of chronic renal failure and portal vein thrombosis were established by specific investigations. Incidentally, junction of the cystic duct with the left hepatic duct and absence of the common bile duct Were found during endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography study. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first reported case of an absence of the common bile duct and junction of the cystic duct with the left hepatic duct in a patient with chronic portal vein thrombosis. Such lesions may cause unexpected complications during biliary surgery

    Portal hypertension in Behcet syndrome

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