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The document you have in front of you is a collection of notes that have been written during the preparation for radiology exams including the EDiR and FRCR by Marcin Czarniecki, a radiologist trained in Poland, United Kingdom, and the United States. The format follows the outline of the European training curriculum, and may be used as a preparatory source for the European Diploma in Radiology (EDiR). This cross-country exam is gaining recognition throughout the world, and is currently missing a comprehensive source for candidate preparation. This document is not that, though. I would like to encourage all readers to participate in improving this document by adding links and content to make this a dynamic, living document, complete with missing material and updated with current tested topics. Links to other free, open-access sources would be highly encouraged, especially Radiopaedia. There is also a great need for a practice question set following the test format. The curriculum sections are divided into three parts: knowledge, skills, and competences & attitudes. These notes deal mostly with the theoretical knowledge needed for the exam. For this reason, it will be most useful in preparation for Part I of the EDiR exam. However, it does not cover the whole curriculum: the sections on Communication & Management as well as Research & Evidence-based medicine are not currently covered in this text. For optimal preparation for the exam, all candidates will benefit from becoming members of both the ESR and RSNA, as membership is free for trainees worldwide. Membership will give free access to an impressive database of online learning and lectures which are made available free of charge. Additionally, you will have free access to all journals which are published by the societies. Please remember that this document is provided for FREE, but donations are strongly encouraged to keep the project going and to help in maintenance costs. You can help by donating for this document at the following link: https://leanpub.com/edirnotes
Good luck!
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Abbreviations used ☞ ∴ > < 1, 2 ~ ABC ACL AD ADPKD AKA AIIS AR ARF ASIS ATN AVN BL BMD Bx CP CPPD CRF CT CTA CTC DD DISH DM DMSA DTPA FD FOOSH Fx Gd GvHD H&N h/o HNPCC SI LCL LES LND LR MAG3 MCL MCP
High Yield Therefore above greater than less than Primary, secondary Approximately Aneurysmal bone cyst Anterior cruciate ligament Autosomal dominant Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease Also known as Anterior Inferior Iliac Spine Autosomal recessive Acute renal failure Anterior Superior Iliac Spine Acute tubular necrosis Avascular necrosis Bilateral Bone mass density Biopsy Clinical presentation Calcium phosphate dehydrate Chronic renal failure Computed tomography Computed tomography angiogram Computed tomography colonography Differential Diagnosis Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis Diabetes mellitus Dimercaptosuccinic acid Diethylenetriaminepentaacetic Fibrous Dysplasia Fall on outstretched hand Fracture Gadolinium Graft vs. host disease Head & Neck history of Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer Signal Intensity Lateral collateral ligament Lower esophageal sphincter Lymph nodes Low risk mercaptoacetyltriglycine Medial collateral ligament Metacarpophalangeal
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MFH MM MR MTP MVA NF NM PCL PNET PTH RCC RF SAH SC SCC SD SNS Susp. TB TCC TDLU TMT TS Tx w/o WHO VHL XR
Malignant fibrous histiocytoma Medial meniscus Magnetic Resonance Metatarsophalangeal Motor vehicle accident Neurofibromatosis Nuclear Medicine Posterior cruciate ligament Primitive Neuroectodermal Tumour Parathyroid hormone Renal cell carcinoma Risk factors Subarachnoid hemorrhage subcutaneous squamous cell carcinoma Standard Deviation sympathetic nervous system Suspected Tuberculosis Transition cell carcinoma Terminal ductal lobular unit Tarsal-Metatarsal Tuberous sclerosis Treatment without World Health Organization von Hippel-Lindau syndrome X-ray
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Table of Contents Breast Radiology............................................................................................... 30 General.............................................................................................................................................. 31 Mammography (MMG) .................................................................................................................. 31 Fibroadenoma .................................................................................................................................. 31 Fibrocystic change ........................................................................................................................... 32 Phyllodes tumour (cystosarcoma phyllodes) ................................................................................. 32 Cysts .................................................................................................................................................. 32 Fat necrosis (oil cyst) ....................................................................................................................... 32 Intraductal Papilloma ..................................................................................................................... 32 Hamartoma (fibroadenolipoma) .................................................................................................... 33 Benign breast microcalcification .................................................................................................... 33 Malignant microcalcifications ........................................................................................................ 33 Invasive breast carcinoma .............................................................................................................. 33 Metastasis ......................................................................................................................................... 34 MMG................................................................................................................................................. 34 US ...................................................................................................................................................... 35 Doppler ............................................................................................................................................. 35 European screening ......................................................................................................................... 35 Interventional ................................................................................................................................... 35 Axillary LN staging.......................................................................................................................... 35 Metastatic disease ............................................................................................................................ 36 MRI ................................................................................................................................................... 36 Implant rupture ............................................................................................................................... 36
Cardiac and Vascular Imaging ....................................................................... 37 Coronary angiogram ....................................................................................................................... 38 MR coronary angiography.............................................................................................................. 39 CT coronagraphy ............................................................................................................................. 40
Congential heart disease .................................................................................. 40 Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) ...................................................................................................... 41 Valvular pulmonary stenosis .......................................................................................................... 41 Persistent left-sided superior vena cava (double SVC) ................................................................ 42 Congenital aortic stenosis................................................................................................................ 42 Aortic coarctation ............................................................................................................................ 42 Pseudocoarctation ............................................................................................................................ 43
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Tetralogy of Fallot ........................................................................................................................... 43 Ebstein anomaly ............................................................................................................................... 43 Transposition of Great Arteries ..................................................................................................... 43 Aortic arch anomalies ...................................................................................................................... 44 Pulmonary artery anomalies .......................................................................................................... 44 Vascular rings and slings ................................................................................................................ 44 Thoracic situs ................................................................................................................................... 44 Cardiosplenic syndromes ................................................................................................................ 45
Acquired heart disease ..................................................................................... 45 LA enlargement ............................................................................................................................... 45 LV enlargement: .............................................................................................................................. 45 RV enlargement ............................................................................................................................... 45 RA enlargement ............................................................................................................................... 45 Partial anomalous pulmonary venous return (PAPVR) .............................................................. 46 Scimitar syndrome ........................................................................................................................... 46 Total anomalous pulmonary venous return (TAPVR)................................................................. 46 Aneurysm repair .............................................................................................................................. 46 Valvular heart disease ..................................................................................................................... 46
Cardiomyopathies ............................................................................................ 46 Lipomatous Hypertrophy of the interatrial septum ..................................................................... 46 Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy ....................................................................................................... 47 Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia................................................................................. 47 Myocardial noncompaction ............................................................................................................ 47 Takotsubo cardiomyopathy ............................................................................................................ 47 Variants/Anomalies of coronary vessels ........................................................................................ 47 Atherosclerotic coronary artery disease ........................................................................................ 48 Kawasaki disease ............................................................................................................................. 48 Pericardial effusion .......................................................................................................................... 48 Constrictive pericarditis .................................................................................................................. 48 Pulmonary arterial hypertension ................................................................................................... 48 Pulmonary edema ............................................................................................................................ 49
Cardiac masses ................................................................................................. 49 Myxoma ............................................................................................................................................ 49 Lipoma .............................................................................................................................................. 50 Rhabdomyoma ................................................................................................................................. 50 Fibroma ............................................................................................................................................ 50
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Angiosarcoma ................................................................................................................................... 50 Rhabdomyosarcoma ........................................................................................................................ 50 Popliteal artery entrapment syndrome .......................................................................................... 50 Pulmonary sequestration (accessory lung) .................................................................................... 50 Pectus excavatum ............................................................................................................................. 51
Peripheral vascular / Doppler ......................................................................... 51 Deep vein thrombosis ...................................................................................................................... 51
Chest Radiology ................................................................................................ 52 Important anatomy .......................................................................................................................... 53 Anaphylaxis ...................................................................................................................................... 53 HRCT - basic interpretation ........................................................................................................... 53 GGO vs. consolidation ..................................................................................................................... 54 Tuberculosis ..................................................................................................................................... 55 TB vs MAI ........................................................................................................................................ 55 Viral pneumonia .............................................................................................................................. 55 Aspergillosis...................................................................................................................................... 55 Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PCP) infection ...................................................................... 56 Histoplasmosis .................................................................................................................................. 57 Streptococcus pneumoniae pneumonia ........................................................................................... 57 Klebsiella pneumoniae pneumonia .................................................................................................. 57 Legionnaires’ disease ....................................................................................................................... 57
Neoplasms.......................................................................................................... 57 Bronchogenic carcinoma ................................................................................................................. 58 Hamartoma ...................................................................................................................................... 58 Carcinoid .......................................................................................................................................... 59 Radiation pneumonitis .................................................................................................................... 59 TNM staging ..................................................................................................................................... 59
Fleischner guidelines ........................................................................................ 60 Solid nodules..................................................................................................................................... 60 Lymphangitis carcinomatosa .......................................................................................................... 60 Malignant pleural effusion .............................................................................................................. 60 Metastases of lung tumours ............................................................................................................ 60 Metastases to lung ............................................................................................................................ 61 Endobronchial metastases............................................................................................................... 61 Miliary metastases ........................................................................................................................... 61 Solitary metastases........................................................................................................................... 61
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Carney triad (Predominantly young women) ............................................................................... 61 Pulmonary blastoma ........................................................................................................................ 62
Chronic lung disease ........................................................................................ 62 Sarcoidosis ........................................................................................................................................ 62 Lofgren syndrome ............................................................................................................................ 62 Heerfordt syndrome ........................................................................................................................ 62 Lupus pernio .................................................................................................................................... 62 Usual Interstitial Pneumonitis (UIP) ............................................................................................. 63 Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis ....................................................................................................... 63 Non-specific intersitial pneumonia (NSIP) .................................................................................... 63 UIP vs. NSIP ..................................................................................................................................... 64 Respiratory bronchiolitis-associated interstitial pneumonia (RB-ILD) ..................................... 64 Desquamative interstitial pneumonia (DIP) .................................................................................. 64 Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia (COP or BOOP) .................................................................. 65 Lymphoid interstitial pneumonia (LIP) ........................................................................................ 65 Acute interstitial pneumonia (AIP, Hamman-Rich syndrome) ................................................... 65 Plasma cell granuloma .................................................................................................................... 65 Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) .............................................................................................. 65 Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) ............................................................................ 66
Collagen vascular diseases ............................................................................... 66 Rheumatoid Arthritis ...................................................................................................................... 66 Ankylosing spondylitis..................................................................................................................... 66 Systemic lupus erythematosus ........................................................................................................ 67 Sjogren disease ................................................................................................................................. 67 Wegener granulomatosis ................................................................................................................. 67 Churg-Strauss syndrome (Eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis) ............................... 67 Langerhans cell histiocytosis (eosinophilic granuloma) ............................................................... 67 Scleroderma (Systemic sclerosis).................................................................................................... 68 Silicosis .............................................................................................................................................. 68 Coal worker’s pneumoconiosis (CWP) .......................................................................................... 68 Asbestosis .......................................................................................................................................... 69 Hypersensitivity pneumonitis ......................................................................................................... 69 Pulmonary infiltrates with eosinophilia......................................................................................... 69
Airway diseases ................................................................................................. 69 Malignant tracheal neoplasm ......................................................................................................... 69 Metastases......................................................................................................................................... 70
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Benign neoplasms............................................................................................................................. 70 Saber-sheath trachea ....................................................................................................................... 70 Tracheobronchomalacia.................................................................................................................. 70 Tracheobronchomegaly (Mounier-Kuhn disease) ........................................................................ 70 Chronic bronchial disease ............................................................................................................... 70 Emphysema ...................................................................................................................................... 70 Bronchiectasis .................................................................................................................................. 71 Cystic Fibrosis .................................................................................................................................. 71 Neurofibromatosis type 1 (von Recklinghausen) .......................................................................... 72 Tuberous sclerosis ............................................................................................................................ 72 Pulmonary alveolar proteinosis ......................................................................................................... 72 Bronchiolitis obliterans (Swyer-James syndrome, unilateral emphysema) ............................... 72
Lung and chest injury ...................................................................................... 73 Pneumomediastinum ....................................................................................................................... 74 Lobar torsion .................................................................................................................................... 74 Aortic dissection ............................................................................................................................... 74
Lung surgery ..................................................................................................... 74 Pneumonectomy ............................................................................................................................... 74 Lobectomy ........................................................................................................................................ 75 Lung transplantation ....................................................................................................................... 75 Pulmonary embolism ....................................................................................................................... 76
Vasculitis ........................................................................................................... 76 Pulmonary AVM .............................................................................................................................. 76 Pulmonary varices ........................................................................................................................... 76 Aortic nipple ..................................................................................................................................... 77 Pulmonary veno-occlusive disease (PVOD) ................................................................................... 77
Pleura................................................................................................................. 77 Pleural fibroma ................................................................................................................................ 77 Malignant mesothelioma ................................................................................................................. 77 Pleural effusion ................................................................................................................................ 78 Empyema vs. Abscess ...................................................................................................................... 78 Chylothorax ...................................................................................................................................... 78
Mediastinum ..................................................................................................... 79 Anterior tumours ............................................................................................................................. 79 Middle mediastinum ........................................................................................................................ 80 Posterior mediastinum .................................................................................................................... 81 Did this document help you? Consider a donation Can you make this document better? Email [email protected]
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Superior vena cava obstruction ...................................................................................................... 81 Castleman disease ............................................................................................................................ 81 Fibrosing mediastinitis .................................................................................................................... 82 Consolidation.................................................................................................................................... 83 Hepatorenal syndromes................................................................................................................... 83 Hidden zones (areas where nodules are missed if 10mm on Us, >12mm on CT/MR Levels II-VIII: >8 on US, >10mm on US MR: CE identifies necrotic lymph nodes PET: more sensitive than Ct/MR for lymph nodes
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Interventional Radiology
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Interventional Radiology General • •
•
•
Stent size should be 10% larger than vessel diameter Balloon sizes Common iliac: 8-10mm EIA: 6-8mm SFA or renal artery: 4-6mm Popliteal artery: 3-4mm Absolute contraindications to tPA Major trauma/surgery within 2 weeks CVA within 2 months Bleeding diathesis Pregnancy Primary or secondary cerebral malignancy Irreversible ischemia Treatment of Femoral artery pseudoaneurysms 2cm: US-guided thrombin injection
Fibroid Complications •
• • • •
Post-embolization syndrome (>52% of patients) Flu-like Lasts up to 10 days Failure of therapy (10%) Persistent non-offensive discharge 7-14% Sepsis 1-2% Premature ovarian failure 1-2%, but increases with age up to 25% in 45+
Popliteal aneurysms • • • •
Most common peripheral aneurysm AAA in 30-50% Contralateral aneurysm in 50-70% Men
TIPSS •
Indications: Refractory ascites
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Interventional Radiology Variceal bleeding uncontrolled otherwise
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Interventional Radiology
• •
Hepatorenal syndrome Hepatopulmonary syndrome Budd-Chiari Contra-indications: Hepatic encephalopathy Procedure: Right hepatic vein used as route of access to right portal vein Flow of contrat toward the porta indicates biliary rupture. Contrast flowing towards periphery = puncture of portal vein and hepatic artery. Shunt gradient less than 12mmHg
Endoleak •
•
• • •
Type I Leak from stent-graft attachment, divided into a type A and B corresponding to proximal and distal Type II Retrograde flow through aortic branches, IMA or lumbar arteries Most common Type III Structural failure of stent graft Type IV Due to porosity of graft Type V Endotension (no obvious cause?)
IVC filter placement •
Check left common iliac vein for presence of double IVC
Paget-Schroetter syndrome • •
Thrombosis of the axillary and subclavian veins usually due to anatomic compression in the costoclavicular space. Usually healthy young adults doing sports with repetitive arm motion (baseball)
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Musculoskeletal Radiology
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Musculoskeletal Radiology Trauma General • • • •
•
Blunt trauma: spleen most commonly injured Penetrating trauma: liver most commonly injured Heart trauma: aortic and mitral valves most often affected Ligamentous injury Grade I: increased signal intensity (SI) around an otherwise normal ligament Grade II: increased SI around ligament AND abnormal thickening of ligament Grade III: ligamentous disruption Spinal columns Anterior: anterior longitudinal ligament and anterior ½ of vertebral body Middle: posterior ½ of vertebral body and posterior longitudinal ligament Posterior: Posterior ligamentous complex
Salter-Harris Fractures •
•
•
•
•
type I Slipped Fracture passes through the growth plate only Good prognosis type II Above Most common Fracture passes through growth plate and metaphysis Good prognosis type III Lower Fracture plane passes through the epiphysis Poorer prognosis type IV Transverse Fracture plane passes through metaphysis and epiphysis Poor prognosis type V Rammed Uncommon Crush injury of growth plate Worst prognosis
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Musculoskeletal Radiology Head and Neck •
LeFort fractures Type 1 horizontal maxillary fx Type 2 fx passes through maxillary alveolar process, maxillary sinuses, infero-medial orbit and nasal bones Type 3 fx passes through the zygomatic arch, infero-medial orbit and nasofrontal suture
Cervical spine •
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4 continuous curves Anterior vertebral body line Posterior vertebral body line Spinolaminar line Posterior spinous process line Atlanto-axial distance: Adults: 3mm Children: 5mm Prevertebral tissues: Adults ➢ Nasopharyngeal space < 10mm anterior to C1 ➢ Retropharyngeal space < 5-7mm at C3 and C4 ➢ Retrotracheal space < 22mm at C6 Children ➢ ⅔ width of C2 body at C3 and C4 level ➢ 6mm) on Grashey view (true AP, oblique view) Electric bulb sign Trough sign (impaction fracture of medial humeral head)
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Musculoskeletal Radiology •
•
•
Acromioclavicular joint injury ACJ distance 5mm of posterior articular tibial cartilage uncovered due to anterior displacement of meniscus Similar-sized posterior and anterior horns of medial meniscus is abnormal (posterior horn should be larger!) MR: T1 and PD more sensitive, T2 more specific Grade I: focal or globular high SI, myxoid degeneration. Grade II: Horizontal clefts of high SI extending to capsule but not the meniscal articular surface (predisposes to tear) Grade III: High SI within meniscus that comes into contact with either the superior or the inferior articular surface (tear is present) Vertical tear: usually traumatic Horizontal tear: commonly degenerative ➢ usually posterior horn of medial meniscus Longitudinal Radial tear: radially oriented vertical tear Meniscal flap tear (parrot beak tear) Bucket handle tear ➢ vertical peripheral meniscal tear extending circumferentially but remaining attached at to its anterior and posterior attachments to the meniscal tears ➢ medial > lateral meniscus ➢ MR: Coronal images - double delta sign • ACL injury Due to rotation at the same time with a varus or valgus stress Tears usually occur at tibial or femoral attachment MR: Sprain: T2 high SI ➢ Partial: attenuation of some fascicles ➢ Complete: discontinuity within low signal ➢ Chronic: thickened or thinned ligament Association: Segond Fx • PCL injury Following posterior displacement of the tibia
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Musculoskeletal Radiology •
•
•
Usually mid-portion of ligament (unlike ACL!) Patellofemoral dislocation Most common dislocation in knee Causes lateral dislocation of the patella relative to trochlear groove of femur Association: medial patellar retinaculum disruption MCL injuries Grade I: minimal tear with no instability Grade II: partial tear with minimal instability Grade III: complete tear with gross instability Chronic tear: thickened MCL with normal SI ☞ O’Donoghue’s triad: ➢ MCL injury ➢ ACL injury ➢ MM damage Pellegrini-Stieda lesion ➢ post-traumatic ossification of femoral attachment of MCL LCL injuries May lead to iliotibial band disruption with severe injuries Sinding-Larsen injury ➢ Avulsion fracture of the lower patellar pole (patellar ligament attachment) Patellar tendinosis ➢ “Jumper's knee” ➢ Affects superior and inferior tendon insertions Osgood-Schlatter disease ➢ Traction osteochondrosis of tibial tubercle ➢ Usually young, active patients ☞ Sinding-Larsen - patellar attachment of patellar tendon ☞ Osgood-Schlatter - tibial attachment of patellar tendon Chondromalacia patellae ➢ Grade I: focal hyperintense areas on T1 not extending to cartilage surface ➢ Grade II: focal hypointense areas extending to cartilage surface with preservation of sharp cartilage margins ➢ Grade III: loss of sharp dark margin between articular cartilage and trochlea and focal hypointense areas extending to articular surface but not down to the osseous surface ➢ Grade IV - Extending to subchondral bone
Ankle •
Weber classification Weber A: lateral malleolar fracture below mortise and oblique fracture of medial malleolus Weber B: lateral malleolar fracture at the level of mortise with avulsion of deltoid ligament
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Musculoskeletal Radiology • •
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•
Weber C: lateral malleolar fracture above mortise with avulsion of deltoid ligament Pilon Fx Comminuted supramalleolar distal tibial fracture extending into the tibial plafond Trimalleolar Fx posterior lip of distal tibia fracture medial and lateral malleolus fracture Maisonneuve Fx avulsion fracture of medial malleolus with associated proximal fibular fracture ☞ Posterior tibialis tendon injury 2nd most common ankle injury females without h/o trauma Talus most of blood supply is through distal talus ∴ talar neck fracture predisposes osteonecrosis
Foot •
•
• •
Normal anatomy 1st metatarsal - medial cuneiform 2nd metatarsal - middle cuneiform 3rd metatarsal - lateral cuneiform ☞ 4th metatarsal - cuboid ☞ 5th metatarsal - cuboid Lisfranc fracture Fracture dislocations at TMT joint follow severe shear forces due to plantar flexion Jones (dancer’s) fracture extra-articular fracture of the proximal 5th metatarsal Freiburg infarction Osteochondritis resulting from repetitive trauma (commonly affects 2nd metatarsal head)
Benign Bone Tumours •
•
1st decade Simple bone cyst Ewing sarcoma Chondroblastoma 2nd decade NOF
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Musculoskeletal Radiology
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Osteochondroma Osteoblastoma Osteosarcoma Osteoid osteoma ABC Chondromyxoid fibroma Chondroma 3rd decade GCT Lymphoma Chondroma 4th decade GCT and Lymphoma Fibrosarcoma and malignant fibrous histiocytoma Osteoma Parosteal osteosarcoma Chondroma 5th and 6th decade Chondroma Osteoma Parosteal osteosarcoma Hemangioma Chondrosarcoma Myeloma Chordoma 7th decade Osteosarcoma
Enchondroma • • • • • • •
2nd most common benign chondral lesion (osteochondroma is most common) 10-80 years M=F Location proximal phalanges, tibia, humerus. Not in skull XR oval or lobulated eccentric lytic lesions popcorn type calcifications MR T1 intermediate, T2 high, Gd+ Pearl periosteal chondroma - long bone metaphyses - no malignant potential ☞ Ollier’s disease - multiple enchondromas with larger malignant potential ➢ associated risk of glioma, pancreatic and ovarian cancer
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Musculoskeletal Radiology ☞ Maffucci’s syndrome ➢ associated risk of ovarian ca ➢ multiple enchondromas and soft tissue hemangiomas (phleboliths)
Chondromyxoid fibroma • • • • •
Usually 10-30 year olds, immature skeleton CP: pain and swelling but can be asymptomatic 60% in long bones, 40% in flat bones XR: eccentric, lobulated metaphyseal lytic lesion. Thinning and expansion of cortex. bubble appearance sclerotic margin MR: no characteristic features DD: chondrosarcoma, adamantinoma, fibrous dysplasia, ABC
Osteochondroma • • • • • • • •
Most common benign lesion Cartilage shaped exostosis 2-60 year olds (2M:1F) Location most commonly around the knee CT/MRI allows for assessment of cartilage cap - should be 2mm osteoblastoma more likely
Osteoblastoma • •
• • • •
Similar to osteoid osteoma but larger (>1.5cm), and does not respond to salicylates CP: pain more chronic and less severe than osteoid osteoma 80% femur) ☞ Look for falling fragment DD: ABC, fibrous dysplasia
Bone island (enostosis) • • •
Congenital CP: asymptomatic Osteopoikilosis - AD inherited. Multiple bone islands
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Musculoskeletal Radiology ☞ Osteopathia striata (Voorhoeve disease) - similar to ^ but linear longitudinal and sunburst striations rather than rounded ones. ☞ Melorheostosis (Leri disease) regional bone sclerosis with a dripping wax appearance
Osteoma • • •
Slow growing tumour consisting of bone cortex CP: asymptomatic, but can affect sinus drainage ☞ Gardner syndrome - multiple osteomas
Aneurysmal bone Cyst (ABC) • • • • • • •
•
Expansile cavity composed of thin-walled blood-filled cystic cavities Can be induced by trauma or tumour CP: mostly 2nd decade, M=F Locations: spine, metaphysis of long bones XR: Expansile, with thin internal trabeculations (soap bubble appearance) NM: doughnut sign ☞ Secondary ABC seen in: NOF chondroblastoma osteosarcoma DD: telangiectatic osteosarcoma
Osteoclastoma / Giant Cell Tumour (GCT) • •
•
• •
aggressive, benign neoplasm from osteoclasts CP: pain and swelling 20-45 year olds 2M:3F (unlike ABC!) skeletally mature patients usually around knee, in metaphyseal plate XR: eccentric, lytic lesion Well-defined non-sclerotic margin MR: very similar to ABC NM: doughnut sign
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Musculoskeletal Radiology Non-ossifying fibroma (NOF) / Fibroxanthoma • •
• • • • •
Benign hamartoma located in long bone metaphysis CP: 2nd decade, asymptomatic NF (5%) may be multiple and familial XR: intracortical lobulated lesion with a soap bubble appearance MR: T1 intermediate SI, T2 high SI (in 80%), + contrast enhancement ☞ Fibrous Cortical Defect - histologically the same but less than 2cm common in children ☞ Jaffe-Campanacci syndrome Multiple NOFs AND cafe au lait spots ☞ Benign Fibrous Histiocytoma Same histology as NOF but occurs in 3rd-5th decade
Desmoplastic Fibroma (Desmoid) • •
rare, locally aggressive neoplasm CP: 10-30 years, M=F Long bones, mandible recurs often
Hemangioma • • • • • • • •
•
Congenital vascular malformation Capillary: arise within the vertebral bodies Cavernous: seen within skull vault CP: usually asymptomatic, may include vertebral collapse Location: Spine (most common), calvarium (2nd most common) ☞ Aggressive Hemangioma extraosseous extension ☞ Maffucci’s syndrome soft tissue cavernous haemangiomas and multiple chondromas ☞ Cystic angiomatosis multifocal condition of either blood or lymphatic vessels CP: ➢ pain and swelling due to visceromegaly, fractures ➢ 50% before 20 years ☞ Gorham’s disease (vanishing bone disease)
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Musculoskeletal Radiology CP: ➢ weakness and limitation of movement ➢ children and youth complete excision of bone can halt disease process
Fibrous dysplasia (Lichtenstein-Jaffe Disease) • • •
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•
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Developmental disorder of bone, ceases growth with maturity Medullary bone is replaced with well-defined areas of fibrous tissue which can ossify CP: Painless Intermediate (mixed) phase ->Late sclerotic (cold) phase CP: elderly, 2M:1F pain deafness high output cardiac failure
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Musculoskeletal Radiology •
•
XR: Skull: basilar invagination (Tom O’Shanter deformity) Pelvis: thickened iliopectineal line Vertebrae: picture frame appearance, ivory vertebrae ☞ Complicated by banana fractures, malignant transformation Osteosarcoma> malignant fibrous histiocytoma> chondrosarcoma
Bone infarction • • •
Sclerotic margins MR: double line sign on T2 serpiginous area with sclerotic margins and not endosteal scalloping
Post-traumatic cortical desmoid (Bufkin tumour) • •
Don’t touch lesion Related to repetitive stress at the attachment of the medial head of gastrocnemius or distal adductor magnus at the posterior medial aspect of the distal femoral metaphysis.
Malignant bone tumours Chondrosarcoma • • •
• • • • •
Cartilage producing better prognosis than osteosarcoma due to late mets CP: >50% over 40 years 1.5M:1F rarely pain, palpable mass or path. Fx XR: well-defined, lytic with chondroid matrix mineralization (calcification in 75%) CT/MRI: may demonstrate extraosseous mass which is commonly seen with pelvic lesions T1 hypointense to muscle, T2 multilobulated ☞ periosteal chondrosarcoma (more in men) ☞ mesenchymal chondrosarcoma younger age group ☞ clear cell chondrosarcoma low-grade with better prognosis
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Musculoskeletal Radiology Osteosarcoma • • • • •
• •
• •
• •
Malignant osteoid producing tumor Second most common primary bone malignancy after multiple myeloma Central (conventional high or low grade, 75% of cases) Intracortical Surface (4-10%) Parosteal (30-40 year olds) ➢ slow-growing ➢ good prognosis ➢ posterior distal femur Periosteal ➢ mean 20 years High-grade ➢ same as central type histologically May be 2 to Paget’s disease or post-radiotherapy CP: pain or a palpable mass 80% between 10 - 30 years 2nd peak after 40 w/predilection in flat bone and vertebrae (secondary, due to Paget’s) Location: metaphysis of growing long bone XR: ☞ Permeative lytic bone ☞ Codman’s triangle Periosteal reaction (sunburst appearance) MR: Adds little to diagnosis but invaluable in staging Pearls ☞ early hematogenous mets, especially lung ☞ Telangiectatic osteosarcoma ➢ septated blood-filled cavities (can mimic ABC) ➢ 4-11% of osteosarcomas ➢ mean age 24 years ➢ very malignant, poor prognosis Intracortical osteosarcoma ➢ 30Gy required
Malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH) • • •
•
Most common primary malignant tumor of fibrous origin affecting bone 25% arise from Paget’s, post-radiotherapy, infarction rarely: FD, NOF, chronic osteomyelitis, THR CP: Peak at 4th decade Pain and swelling Central metaphysis of long bones (especially around knee) XR: lytic, resembling mets
Fibrosarcoma • •
Fibrous origin May occur secondary to: Paget’s dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma bone infarction irradiation osteomyelitis • CP: 20-50 years M=F pain and swelling • DD: MFH
Ewing sarcoma •
•
CP: 5-15 years, 90% under 30 systemic symptoms (pyrexia, high ESR) XR: diaphysis and metadiaphysis of long bone lytic, saucerization Multilaminar, onion peel periosteal reaction Hair-on-end appearance ☞ PNET ➢ more differentiated form of Ewing sarcoma
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Musculoskeletal Radiology ➢ Askin’s tumour: PNET tumour of the chest wall occurring in children and young adults
Chordoma • • •
•
•
slow growing, aggressive from ectopic remnants of notochord CP: 50-70 years pain and local pressure effects for about 1 year before presentation 2nd most common primary spinal malignancy >50% of all sacral tumours Location: Sacrococcygeal (50%) Clivus (40%) MR T1- low to intermediate SI T2- high variable enhancement
Adamantinoma • • •
•
locally aggressive, locally recurs epithelial origin CP ~ 35 years 5M:4F Location: 85% in tibia (midshaft)
Staging MSK tumours •
•
•
•
Stage IA low grade Intracompartmental Stage IB low grade Extracompartmental Stage IIA high grade Intracompartmental Stage IIB high grade
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Musculoskeletal Radiology •
•
Extracompartmental Stage IIIA low or high grade Intracompartmental ☞ metastases to lung Stage IIIB low or high grade Extracompartmental ☞ metastases to any other site
Metabolic and Endocrine skeletal disease Osteoporosis • •
• • • •
•
most common metabolic disorder (50% of women, 20% of men) WHO definition BMD > -1 SD of young adult mean normal BMD between -1 and -2.5SD below mean osteopenia BMD < -2.5 SD osteoporosis XR changes seen once 50% of density is lost Type I (due to lack of estrogen) 15-20 years after menopause Type II (senile osteoporosis) due to secondary hyperparathyroidism Reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD/ Sudeck’s atrophy) overactivity of SNS causing pain, swelling and hyperaemia leading to increased bone resorption ☞ Transient osteoporosis of hip self-limiting affecting young middle aged patients (M>F) usually happens in 3rd trimester in pregnant women
Osteomalacia • •
Vit D deficiency in mature skeleton Causes malabsorption (fat soluble) nutritional deficiency chronic liver disease CRF
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156
Musculoskeletal Radiology •
Meds (anti-convulsants) XR Looser’s zone (pseudofracture/Milkman’s fracture) ➢ Transient lucent areas within bone ➢ Radiolucent line perpendicular to cortex with slightly sclerotic margin ➢ Seen in: ✓ Paget’s disease ✓ osteogenesis imperfecta ✓ fibrous dysplasia ✓ osteomalacia
Rickets • • •
• •
• •
Vitamin D deficiency in immature skeleton features of secondary hyperparathyroidism XR: loss of normal zone of provisional calcification adjacent to metaphysis leading to widened growth plate Harrison’s sulcus: rib in drawing near diaphragm Craniotabes Rachitic rosary Vitamin D resistant rickets due to defective renal tubular reabsorption of phosphate Vitamin D dependent rickets AR Type I: defect in renal production of active metabolite Type II: end-organ resistance to active metabolite Acquired hypophosphatemic rickets (tumor induced oncogenic rickets) hemangiopericytoma, NOF, GCT, FD, osteoblastoma Metaphyseal chondrodysplasias mimic rickets ➢ Schmit (mild) ➢ Jansen (severe)
Hyperparathyroidism •
Primary Due to increased PTH ➢ adenoma (80%) ➢ hyperplasia (15-20%) ➢ carcinoma (0.5%)
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Musculoskeletal Radiology •
• • •
Secondary Due to fall in serum Ca ➢ malabsorption ➢ CRF Tertiary Due to long-standing secondary hyperparathyroidism when autonomous adenoma develops CP: often asymptomatic. May have stone, nephrocalcinosis, HT, ulcers, pancreatitis, osteoporosis, lethargy XR 95% normal subperiosteal erosions of bone ➢ radial aspects of middle phalanges of index and middle fingers acro-osteolysis pepper pot or salt and pepper skull chondrocalcinosis ➢ deposition of CPPD in articular cartilage and fibrocartilage ➢ seen only in primary hypoparathyroidism brown tumours (osteitis fibrosa cystica) ➢ located in usually in mandible, ribs and pelvis osteosclerosis ➢ rugger jersey spine osteoporosis
Cushing’s syndrome •
increased free circulating GC adrenal adenoma, iatrogenic, ectopic ACTH prod (bronchial ca)
Cushing’s disease •
increased free circulating GC from pituitary adenoma
Hypoparathyroidism • •
•
reduced or absent PTH causes developmental post-op. autoimmune end-organ resistance CP: Tetany and fits due to hypocalcemia
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Musculoskeletal Radiology • •
XR generalized or localized osteosclerosis shortened 4th and 5th metacarpals Pearls pseudohypoparathyroidism ➢ AD ➢ end organ resistance to PTH pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism ➢ Features like in PHP but no biochemical abnormality
Thyroid disease •
•
Hyperthyroidism generalized osteoporosis thyroid acropachy Hypothyroidism cretinism results in delayed skeletal maturation bullet-shaped vertebra wormian bones
Acromegaly • •
eosinophilic adenoma of pituitary (GH producing) XR osteoporosis Skull ➢ enlarged mastoid air cell and sinuses ➢ frontal bossing ➢ prognathism Spine ➢ large vertebral bodies ➢ posterior scalloping ➢ lordosis Hands ➢ Arrowhead distal phalanges Feet ➢ increased heel pad thickness (>25mm)
Osteogenesis imperfect • •
Type I collagen defect Fracture incidence declines following puberty
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Musculoskeletal Radiology •
•
•
•
Type I AD (>70%) 1:30000 mildest and commonest short stature, joint laxity, vertebral fractures Type II lethal perinatal spontaneous dominant mutation death within 3 mos Type III 15% severe, progressive Type IV AD moderately severe similar to type I but more severe osteopenia and deformities
Osteopetrosis • •
defective osteoclastic function CP: AR type - lethal ➢ Erlenmeyer flask deformity ➢ Sandwich appearance ➢ Bone within a bone appearance AD benign type (Albers-Schonberg disease) - asymptomatic with late manifestations ➢ Type I: fractures unusual ➢ Type II: fractures common AR intermediate type - rare
Hypophosphatasia • •
AR low levels of serum Alk-Phos or raised urine levels of phosphoethanolamine
Hyperphosphatasia • •
Genetic mutation in osteoprotegerin. Elevated Alk-Phos resembles Paget’s disease, dubbed Juvenile Paget's disease
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160
Musculoskeletal Radiology Renal osteodystrophy • • •
•
bone disease associated with chronic renal impairment Untreated: Vit D deficiency and secondary hyperparathyroidism Treated: Extensive vascular and soft tissue calcification (phosphate retention) ➢ may lead to ischemic necrosis of skin, SC tissues Renal tubular defects involves either proximal or distal tubule Congenital: ➢ Fanconi syndrome ➢ cystinosis ➢ X-linked hypophosphatemia Acquired: ➢ Wilson’s disease ➢ Toxins ➢ interstitial nephritis ➢ oncogenic rickets
Hypervitaminosis A • •
occurs in patients receiving Vit. A for skin disorders XR: bony outgrowths from the spine (especially cervical spine)
Lead poisoning •
lead is deposited in growing metaphyses
PVC poisoning • •
Raynaud's phenomenon acro-osteolysis
Fluorosis •
Osteosclerosis
Scurvy (vitamin C deficiency) •
Wimberger’s sign sclerosis of epiphyseal margins
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Musculoskeletal Radiology • • •
Frankel’s line Dense metaphyseal lines Trummerfeld zone Lucent zone next to Frankel’s line Pelken’s spurs
Joint disease • • •
Osteoarthritis CP: early morning stiffness XR: joint space narrowing subchondral cysts and sclerosis osteophytes loose bodies chondrocalcinosis Hands ➢ 1st MCP ➢ interphalangeal joints Hips ➢ Egger’s cyst (subchondral cyst) Foot ➢ Especially seen in 1st MTP joint ➢ Talar beak (talonavicular joint forms bone spur) ☞ Erosive OA ➢ affects middle aged women ➢ destructive changes outstrip productive changes ➢ XR: gull wing pattern
Hemophilic arthropathy •
• • • •
recurrent bleeding to joins Hemophilia A - factor VIII deficiency Hemophilia B (Christmas disease) - factor IX deficiency only expressed in males Stage I Soft tissue swelling and effusion Stage II Stage I + periarticular osteoporosis + epiphyseal overgrowth Stage III
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Musculoskeletal Radiology • • • •
Erosions, sclerosis and subchondral cysts Stage IV Stage III + diffuse joint space narrowing Stage V Stiff contracted join with sig. degenerative change MR: look for hemosiderin septic arthritis is a rare complication
Neuropathic arthropathy • • • •
Congenital insensitivity to pain (100% prevalence) syringomyelia (20-50%) neurosyphilis DM (1% of cases!)
Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis • •
•
pain and swelling >/= 1 joints for 6 weeks in 5 joints involved XR: Knee > wrist marked radial head enlargement cervical spine commonly affected
Diffuse Idiopathic Skeletal Hyperostosis (Forestier’s disease) • • •
Flowing ligamentous spinal ossification involving ≥4 contiguous vertebrae T7-T12 common Reaction to stress, not true arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis • • •
Inflammatory synovitis with synovial hypertrophy Rheumatoid factor (+) CP: morning stiffness
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Musculoskeletal Radiology •
symmetrical joint swelling tendon rupture (F>M) XR: Early ➢ juxtaarticular osteopenia ➢ soft tissue swelling joint space widening Late ➢ diffuse osteoporosis ➢ joint subluxation and dislocation End stage ➢ pan-compartmental loss of joint space ➢ carpal bone resorption ➢ arthritis mutilans Hands: ➢ 2nd and 3rd MCP joints ➢ Styloid processes ➢ Ulnar deviation ➢ Volar subluxation and dislocation of phalanges at MCP joint ➢ Rotary subluxation of scaphoid ➢ Boutonniere deformity ➢ Swan neck deformity ➢ Z deformity of thumb ➢ Telescope fingers Foot ➢ first hands, then feet ➢ MTP joint (particularly 4th and 5th) Spine ➢ Atlantoaxial subluxation ➢ Odontoid erosion ➢ Odontoid fracture ☞ Felty’s syndrome ➢ RA + splenomegaly + neutropenia ➢ weight loss ➢ skin pigmentation ☞ Caplan’s syndrome ➢ RA + pneumoconiosis
Jaccoud’s arthritis • • •
not related to RA causes severe, non-destructive symmetrical polyarthropathy occurs after rheumatic fever
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164
Musculoskeletal Radiology Ankylosing spondylitis • • •
Involves diarthrodial joints 10M:F XR: Spine ➢ Shiny or ivory corner ➢ Anterior vertebral body squaring ➢ Romanus lesion ➢ Andersson lesion ➢ Syndesmophytes ➢ Posterior longitudinal ligament calcification
Psoriatic arthropathy • • •
Seronegative spondyloarthropathy Asymmetrical in 70% XR: bilateral, asymmetrical destructive changes Pencil-in-cup appearance Sausage digit Parasyndesmophytes Unlike OA - new bone formation Sacroiliitis common and bilateral
Reiter’s syndrome • • •
• •
Seronegative spondyloarthropathy Male men Reiter’s triad Conjunctivitis Urethritis Arthritis Also: keratoderma blenorrhagicum STD: Chlamydia, Salmonella, Shigella, Yersinia, Campylobacter Calcaneal and big toe involvement common
Gout • •
Inborn error of purine metabolism -> hyperuricemia -> monosodium urate crystal deposition AD
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165
Musculoskeletal Radiology • •
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome presents in children with hyperuricemia and mental retardation Saturnine gout decreased renal urate clearance following a lead nephropathy
Multicentric reticulohistiocytosis (lipoid dermato-arthritis) • •
unknown etiology deposition of giant multinucleated vacuolated histiocytes within soft tissues
Calcium Pyrophosphate Deposition Disease (Pseudogout) (CPPD) • •
• • • • •
Deposition of Calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystals in joints, bursae, tendons, intervertebral discs Associated with: hypothyroidism haemochromatosis hyperparathyroidism joint injury ochronosis Asymptomatic If symptomatic known as pseudogout Chondrocalcinosis Polarizing microscopy MSU crystals positively birefringent Crowned dens syndrome tophaceous pseudogout at AAJ
Basic Calcium Phosphate Deposition Disease • • •
Called hydroxyapatite deposition disease (HADD) Due to repetitive trauma with dystrophic calcifications CP: periarticular deposition common in supraspinatus tendon
Hemochromatosis • • •
Iron overload May be secondary to hepatic xanthine oxidase deficiency XR symmetrical arthropathy involving 2nd and 3rd MCP joints
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166
Musculoskeletal Radiology Amyloidosis •
Affects large peripheral joints
Ochronosis (Alkaptonuria) • • •
Rare AR disorder of tyrosine metabolism leading to accumulation of homogentisic acid within tissues Black or brown cartilage pigmentation Brittle, predisposes to early degenerative disease Usually spinal involvement involves nucleus pulposus
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) • •
ANCA (+) symmetrical arthritis of hands, wrists and knees
Scleroderma • • • •
•
Raynaud’s phenomenon Acro-osteolysis ligamentous and intra-articular calcification CREST syndrome Calcinosis Raynaud's phenomenon Esophageal dysmotility Sclerodactyly Telangiectasia Thibierge-Weissenbach syndrome ➢ calcinosis ➢ digital ischemia Mixed connective tissue disorder Scleroderma Polymyositis RA SLE
Hypertrophic osteoarthropathy (HPOA) •
Triad of:
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167
Musculoskeletal Radiology
•
•
periosteal new bone formation painful finger clubbing synovitis Associated with intrathoracic tumors Bronchogenic Ca Mesothelioma Benign pleural fibroma Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in HIV patients ☞ Pachydermoperiostosis AD, idiopathic form of HPOA black men finger clubbing pachydermia may resemble acromegaly
Pigmented Villonodular Synovitis • • • • •
Proliferation of entire synovium from joints, bursae, tendons Young adults MRI: black synovium ☞ Giant cell tumour of tendon sheath PVNS affecting synovium AND tendon sheath ☞ Lipoma arborescens
Synovial osteochondromatosis • • •
metaplastic cartilage formation that can occur throughout synovium cartilage fragments become detached and float freely within joint or bursa Typically monoarticular calcified loose bodies
Polymyositis •
inflammatory condition of unknown etiology
Dermatomyositis • •
polymyositis accompanied by rash ¾ of criteria symmetrical proximal muscle weakness
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168
Musculoskeletal Radiology elevated muscle enzymes pathology EMG characteristic
Sarcoidosis • • •
10% with bone involvement distal and middle phalanges XR cyst-like lucencies ☞ No joint space narrowing Lace-like pattern of bone destruction
Acute osteomyelitis • • • • • •
Infants - 12 mo passes to epiphysis and joint space easily 1-16 years epiphyseal and joint space infections rare - stays in metaphysis adults epiphysis Hematogenous S. aureus, H. influenzae, S. Pneumoniae Foreign body or implant coagulase negative staphylococci (commensals) Open fracture Gram-neg rods (pseudomonas) Anaerobic gram positive rods (clostridium)
Chronic osteomyelitis •
•
XR: sequestrum ➢ mechanically separate avascular bone fragment (foci of recurrence) involucrum ➢ shell of living bone surrounding living bone cloaca ➢ defect in involucrum that can allow pus to escape Pearl Sclerosing osteomyelitis of Garre ➢ chronic untreated osteomyelitis with a profound sclerotic reaction
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169
Musculoskeletal Radiology Sickle cell disease: higher incidence of Salmonella osteomyelitis
Syphilis • • • • • •
Wimberger’s sign: granulomas within long bone metaphyses and producing lytic areas Periostitis Metaphysitis Osteomyelitis Gumma: localized osteomyelitis with sclerosis Syphilitic dactylitis cortical thinning Charcot joint osteomyelitis can be differentiated with GD contrast (positive enhancement)
Necrotizing fasciitis •
Group A hemolytic strep and S. Aureus
Tuberculous infection • • •
hematogenous spread From lung with active disease in spinal cord (intramedullary or extramedullary) > medulla (area postrema) Did this document help you? Consider a donation Can you make this document better? Email [email protected]
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Neuroradiology Brainstem glioma • •
30% of pediatric infratentorial tumours most common pontine lesion, poor prognosis
Medulloblastoma • • • • • • •
30-40% of all posterior fossa tumours Known as PNET of posterior fossa Originates on roof of ventricle, vermian midline! CP: peak incidence at 7 years (seen at midline), 2nd peak in young adults with a less aggressive form (seen in cerebellar hemispheres) Intracranial and intraspinal subarachnoid dissemination seen in ⅓ of patients at presentation (mets!) CT: hyperdense Associations Li-Fraumeni Gorlin’s Basal cell nevus Turcot syndrome Cowden syndrome
Atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumours • • •
Poor prognosis Children younger than with medulloblastoma, usually 80% of cerebellopontine angle lesions 10% meningioma 5% epidermoid ☞ Bilateral Schwannomas = NF2
Epidermoid and Dermoid tumours •
•
•
Epidermoid: tumours with thin capsule of epidermis Adults Commonly high on T2WI Dermoid: tumours with a wall containing the full width of the dermis Children Similar signal characteristics to fat Conform to shape of arachnoid space
Meningioma • •
Derived from arachnoid cell rests (cap cells) WHO grade I: 90%, benign
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Neuroradiology • • • • •
•
WHO grade II: atypical features, increases mitotic activity and necrosis WHO grade III: anaplastic (malignant) CP: 5-6th decade (F>M), NF2 Location: 90% supratentorial CT/MR: spherical, well-circumscribed or a flat infiltrating ‘en plaque’ lesion MR: capping cysts ➢ vasogenic edema ➢ cleft sign MRS: alanine peak ☞ If seen in a child, think NF2
•
☞ Multiple meningiomas and CN tumour - think NF2
•
☞ May occur in lateral ventricles
Chordoma • •
Malignant transformation of notochordal cells Soap-bubble appearance
Glomus Jugulare Tumour (Chemodectoma) • •
Arises from paraganglion cells of chemo- and baroreceptor precursors May cause thrombosis of the internal jugular vein
Cerebral metastasis • • • • • •
Adult (small cell) lung, breast, colon, malignant melanoma Children neuroblastoma, Wilms’ tumour, rhabdomyosarcoma, osteosarcoma If calcification present, think: GI tract, breast or osteosarcoma If hemorrhage present, think: melanoma, renal, choriocarcinoma, thyroid, lung, breast 80% supratentorial, 66% multiple CT: Double-dose contrast with delayed imaging best Small mets homogenous enhancement, larger mets ring enhancement due to necrosis
Meningeal metastasis •
Pachymeninges (dura mater) Breast ca
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Neuroradiology •
➢ ➢ ➢ ➢ ➢
Curvilinear or diffuse contrast enhancement Leptomeninges (arachnoid and pia mater) More common! Leukemia Lymphoma Breast Lung cancer Only 25% detected on MR, 50% with single LP, 95% with serial LP
Central neurocytoma • • • •
Benign, slow-growing intraventricular tumour typically arises from septum pellucidum CP: 2-3rd decade, obstructive hydrocephalus common MR: septated cysts, calcifications
Choroid plexus papilloma • • • •
Benign tumour of choroid plexus CP: more common in children, most common brain tumour in L bronchus XR: Hyperlucent lung Expiratory film or lateral decubitus
Lower airways Pulmonary sequestration • •
•
☞ Posterobasal most common location Intralobar Age: adults, older children Airless or cystic Venous supply: Pulmonary vein Arterial supply: Thoracic aorta > abdominal aorta Associations: 10% of patients (5% skeletal, 5% foregut) Extralobar Age: neonates Always airless! Venous supply: Systemic (IVC or Azygous) Arterial supply: Thoracic aorta > abdominal aorta Associations: 65% of patients 25% diaphragmatic defect 25% pulmonary hypoplasia
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207
Paediatric Radiology Bronchogenic cyst • • •
Results from abnormal budding of the tracheobronchial tree Contain respiratory epithelium Location: 85% in mediastinum Subcarinal/parahilar
Congenital cystic adenoid malformation (CCAM) • •
Proliferation of glandular lung tissue without normal alveolar differentiation Respiratory distress in first days of life XR: ➢ Macrocystic ✓ Better prognosis ✓ Mediastinal shift ✓ Stocker 1 (>3cm cysts): most common ✓ Stocker 2 ( internal iliac -> infrarenal aorta Tip above the renal arteries at T8-T12
Umbilical Venous line (UVL or UVC) • •
UV -> left portal vein -> ductus venosus (closes after 96 hours) -> IVC -> Right atrium May be displaced into portal or hepatic branch
Central line •
Central line should be ideally positioned superior to carina
Endotracheal tube (ET tube) •
Tip located between thoracic inlet and carina
Gasless abdomen •
2 hours - stomach
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217
Paediatric Radiology • •
6 hours - small intestine 24 hours – rectum
Gastroschisis • • • • •
Extra-abdominal herniation (evisceration) of fetal or neonatal bowel loops Exit into the amniotic cavity through a periumbilical abdominal wall defect 90% to the right of cord Only 5% associated with congenital anomalies ☞ No surrounding membrane like in omphalocele
Omphalocele • • •
Herniation into base of umbilical cord Liver herniation typical +/- bowel Associations Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome Trisomies
Esophagus • •
• • •
• • •
Esophageal atresia XR: Performed in prone position with a horizontal beam Fistula usually above carina N-type 85% (esophageal atresia with a distal tracheal fistula) H-type 5% Associations Vertebral anomalies Anorectal anomalies Cardiovascular anomalies Tracheal anomalies Esophageal fistula Renal anomalies (agenesis) Limb anomalies VSD Ductus arteriosus Reflux LES immaturity in first 3 months of life XR:
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Paediatric Radiology Scintigraphy most sensitive technique to determine reflux
Stomach Hypertrophic pyloric stenosis •
• •
Associations: Turner syndrome Trisomy 18 Rubella XR Peristaltic waves US Appears as target lesion Scan in RPO Pyloric muscle thickness >3.5mm Pyloric length >15mm Transverse diameter >11mm Shoulder sign Indented gastric antrum
Volvulus • •
Mesenteroaxial Pylorus above GEJ Organoaxial Rare in children Gastric outlet obstruction Association: ➢ Large hiatal hernia
Duodenum, pancreas, small bowel Duodenal atresia/stenosis •
Associations 30% Down syndrome 40% polyhydramnios, premature
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Paediatric Radiology •
XR Double bubble sign
Duodenal web • • • •
Congenital duodenal obstruction with a diaphragm Usually occurs in 2nd part of duodenum Associations Down syndrome XR Windsock sign
Malrotation and midgut volvulus • •
•
•
Due to short mesenteric attachment allowing for the bowel to twist. XR/US SMV anterior or to the left of SMA Gastric outlet obstruction Spiraling of duodenum and jejunum around SMA axis Associations Gastroschisis Omphalocele Diaphragmatic hernia Duodenal/jejunal atresia ☞ Ladd’s bands Peritoneal bands in patients with malrotation Located from malplaced cecum in relation to porta hepatis
Non-rotation • • •
Midgut returns to peritoneum without rotation Usually asymptomatic XR: Small bowel on right side of abdomen Colon on left side of abdomen SMV left to SMA
Meconium ileus •
Usually at terminal ileum with ascending microcolon Did this document help you? Consider a donation Can you make this document better? Email [email protected]
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Paediatric Radiology •
XR: Neuhauser sign (soap bubble appearance, air mixed with meconium) Calcification due to meconium peritonitis
Intussusception • • • •
•
95% Ileocolic and ileoileocolic Usually in first 2 years of life Most commonly caused by viral gastroenteritis US Target/Doughnut sign Pseudokidney sign Reduction Contrast or air reduction @ 5 mm in 2nd trimester >10 mm in 3rd trimester
Ureteral duplication • • • •
Orthotopic ureter: drains lower pole and enters bladder near trigone Associated with VUR Ectopic ureter: drain upper pole and enters bladder inferiorly and medially (Weigert-Meyer rule) Associated with ureterocele and obstruction Complete ureteral duplication with intersphincteric insertion of the ureter draining the upper moiety may cause incontinence in girls! XR Increased distance from top of nephrogram to collecting system Abnormal axis of collecting system Concave upper border of renal pelvis
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225
Paediatric Radiology
Diminshed number of calyces compared to normal side (drooping lily sign) Lateral displacement of kidney and ureter Spiral course of ureter Filling defect in bladder
Congenital ureteropelvic junction • • •
Most common congenital anomaly of the GU tract in neonates 20% bilateral Treated with pyeloplasty
Primary megaureter • •
Congenital dilatation of distal ureter due to functional obstruction (abnormal development of muscle layers, achalasia) 95% isolated finding
Circumcaval ureter • • • • •
•
Abnormality of IVC IVC usually derived of supracardinal vein (posterior to ureter), if derived from right subcardinal vein or postcardinal veins, then the ureter is trapped behind IVC Mostly boys On right, unless situs inversus also present Low loop type (more common) Fishhook, “J” course Ureter obstructed High loop type (less common) Mild obustruction
Cloacal exstrophy • • • • •
Spina bifida aperta Lipomyelomeningocele Diastasis of symphysis Bladder exstrophy Colon exstrophy
Prune-Belly syndrome (Triad syndrome, Eagle-Barrett syndrome) •
Widely separated abdominal rectus, hydroureteronephrosis, cryptorchidism
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226
Paediatric Radiology Posterior urethral valves • • •
•
Type I (most common) Derive from plica colliculi Type II Mucosal folds extend proximally from verumontanum to the bladder neck Type III Diaphragm with central aperture at the distal prostatic urethra Verumontanum in this type not enlarged! XR MCUG is method of choice
Kidneys Autosomal recessive kidney disease • •
The less severe the renal findings, the more severe hepatic periportal fibrosis XR Enlarged hyperechoic kidneys (hallmark) Hepatic fibrosis Portal venous hypertension
Multicystic dysplastic kidneys • • •
Unilateral: normal life expectancy as long as other kidney normal, bilateral = fatal large, noncommunicating cysts XR Thick fibrous septa Multiple, large cysts Absence of renal artery
Multilocular cystic nephroma • •
Congenital renal lesion characterized by large cystic spaces (>10cm) Biphasic distribution
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Paediatric Radiology •
2mo-4 years (mostly males) >40 years (mostly females) XR: Calcifications uncommon Must be surgically removed because indistinct from cystic Wilms tumor
Vesico-ureteral reflux • • • • •
Grade I: reflux to ureter but not kidney Grade II: reflux into ureter, pelvis, and calyces without dilatations Grade III: reflux to calyces with mild dilatation, blunted fornices Grade IV: to calyces with moderate dilatation, obliteration of fornices Grade V: gross dilatation, tortuous ureters
Lymphangiectasia •
Rare
• •
Abnormal lymphatics cause parapelvic and perinephric cystic spaces XR: Scalloping of kidney outline Water signal on CT
Wilms tumour • • •
•
Arises from metanephric blastema 3rd most common malignancy after leukemia and brain tumours Associations: Nephroblastomatosis WT gene on chromosome 11 identified in minority of patients ➢ WAGR syndrome (WT-1) ➢ Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (WT-2) XR: Exophytic with pseudocapsule Cystic areas renin release via JG baroreceptors. Increased renin (and AT-II) leads to vasoconstriction • Fibromuscular Dysplasia (FMD) 15-20% ☞ usually mid/distal artery involved string of beads appearance Dilation easy w/ angioplasty • Takayasu’s disease: rare disease affecting aorta and its branches • US: limited technique 42% arteries not visualized. ☞ Increased Peak systolic velocity >150 cm/s ☞ Increased Renal artery to aortic velocity ratio >3.5 ☞ Increased Acceleration time >0.07sec • • • •
☞ Increased Resistive index >0.7 ACE renography: 99mTc-DTPA or 99mTc-MAG3 reduction in total and relative function of the affected kidney (>5-10%) CTA: most sensitive MRA: may also provide functional imaging, but inferior to CTA. Good for proximal artery stenosis detection DSA: previously gold standard
Renal artery aneurysm • Causes: FMD, pregnancy, mesenchymal disease (NF, Ehlers-Danlos), atherosclerosis • ⅓ parenchyma destroyed 70% mortality streaky, mottled gas radiating peripherally ?nephrectomy needed • Type 2: L). May develop calcifications or a pseudocyst
Primary adrenal lymphoma • More commonly in widespread lymphoma (most commonly in NHL) • Primary lymphoma very rare • CT: adrenal enlargement, with retained shape
Primary adrenocortical carcinoma • • • • •
Rare, highly malignant 90% produce steroids, only 50% cause symptoms related to hormone production Result in Cushing’s, with virilization, feminization and hyperaldosteronism CP: 45-55 and M CT: large (85% >6 cm), more commonly on left (10% BL), patchy calcification internal hemorrhage and necrosis common heterogenous enhancement local invasion
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• • • •
MRI: T1 isointense, T2 hyperintense to liver Scintigraphy: NP-59 (131I-6-iodomethyl-19-norcholesterol) reduced uptake Mets: liver, lungs, bones. Common at presentation Associations: Li-Fraumeni syndrome, Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome
Metanephric adenoma • • • •
Benign More common in middle-aged and elderly females Well-defined, encapsulated, solitary mass NCECT: hyperattenuating
Adrenal myelolipoma • • • • •
Rare, benign neoplasm of fat and bone marrow tissue Asymptomatic and non-functioning Hemorrhage or necrosis may cause pain No malignant potential CT/MRI: fat attenuation with adrenal mass
Endogenous Cushing’s syndrome • Endogenous Cushing’s - excess ACTH production (75%) and excess cortisol from an adrenal neoplasm (25%) • ACTH-dependent Cushing’s disease BL adrenal hyperplasia Overt (short-onset): rule out small cell lung ca - producing ACTH Occult (long duration): rule out bronchial carcinoid tumour (less frequent islet cell, pheo, medullary thyroid ca, thymic carcinoid) • Adrenocortical adenoma (10-20% of Cushing’s) CT: characteristic low density of adenoma, remainder of the gland atrophic • Adrenal carcinoma (10-15% of Cushing’s) Carney complex (AD) Abnormal skin pigmentation Endocrine abnormalities (commonly primary pigmented nodular adrenocortical disease leading to ACTH-dependent Cushing’s)
Primary Hyperaldosteronism (Conn’s syndrome) • 80% - benign (adrenocortical, Conn’s tumour) adenoma, 20%- BL adrenal hyperplasia, rare adrenocortical ca • Adrenocortical adenoma (Conn’s tumor)
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within H&N > bladder • 10% rule 10% extra adrenal (paraganglionoma) 10% BL 10% malignant 10% non-functioning 10% inherited 10% calcified 10% invade IVC or Renal v. • Associations: MEN II (50%) NF1 (10%) vHL (10%) Sturge-Weber syndrome Carney’s triad Tuberous sclerosis • CP: tachycardia, headache, hypertension • ☞ hypertensive crisis can be precipitated by CM • NCECT: Round masses, isodense to surrounding soft tissue/ may show fluid filled center (hemorrhage?), speckled calcification, usually ca. 5cm at presentation • CECT: Intense enhancement. Use non-ionic contrast medium to avoid hypertensive crisis • MRI: Method of choice T1- low SI T2- very high SI strong SI post Gd
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• MIBG scintigraphy: increased uptake • Octreotide scintigraphy: increased uptake • Increased vanilmandelic acid levels in 24-hour urine sample test
Adrenogenital syndrome • Androgen-producing adrenal tumours are usually cancerous • CT: usually adrenal enlargement
Adrenal metastasis • • • •
Bronchogenic carcinoma Colorectal ca Breast ca Pancreatic ca
Adrenal injury • Most commonly seen on the right
Pediatric Genitourinary disorders Horseshoe kidney • • • • •
Renal anomaly (1:400 live births), M>F Due to in utero contact of metanephric tissue. Located lower than normal due to inferior mesenteric artery blocking ascent Always associated with malrotation Associations: PUJ obstruction (30%), duplicated ureters (10%). medullary sponge kidney, anorectal and MSK anomalies, Turner syndrome ☞ Increased risk of Wilms’ tumour formation
Cross-fused renal ectopia • One kidney displaced across midline and fused inferiorly to the relatively normally positioned kidney
Septum of Bertin
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• Prominent column of Bertin • Present in ~50% of population
Dromedary hump • Prominent superolateral border of the left kidney
Juvenile nephronophthisis (medullary cystic disease) • Medullary cysts associated with interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy • Juvenile nephronophthisis: AD. Juvenile onset, ca. 10 year disease duration • Medullary cystic disease: AD. Adult onset, rapidly progressive - death within 2 years
Medullary (Multicystic) Dysplastic Kidney (MCDK) • Ureteral obstruction or atresia during metanephric stage causing collecting ducts to enlarge into cysts • CP: usually unilateral. asymptomatic, presents with neonatal abdominal mass (2nd most common after hydronephrosis) • US: cluster of grapes appearance • Prognosis depending on contralateral kidney function
Wilms’ tumour (nephroblastoma) • • • • • • •
Arise from metanephric blastema cells Solid with fibrous pseudocapsule May invade renal vein and IVC CP: classically asymptomatic abdominal mass, hematuria. 3rd most child malignancy after leukemia and brain tumours 10% bilateral CT: exophytic mass enhancing less than renal parenchyma claw sign: normal renal tissue stretched to periphery of the lesion spreads through direct extension and displacement • Associations: Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome: macroglossia, exophthalmos, gigantism Denys-Drash syndrome: pseudohermaphroditism Sotos syndrome: cerebral gigantism Bloom’s syndrome: immunodeficiency and facial telangiectasia WAGR syndrome: Wilms’, Aniridia, GU abnormalities, mental retardation
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Rhabdoid tumour of kidney • Most aggressive malignant renal tumour in childhood (originates from renal sinus) • CP: 1st year of life paraneoplastic hypercalcemia • CT: indistinguishable from a Wilms’ tumour
Mesoblastic nephroma • Tumor derived from early renal mesenchyme. Does not invade or metastasize. • Most common solid neonatal renal neoplasm presenting as a renal mass
Multilocular cystic nephroma • Uncommon cystic renal mass derived from metanephric blastema • Nephrectomy curative • Bimodal distribution males >M, middle age Diabetics and immunocompromised patients High association with E.coli infection May be extremely aggressive invading the perivesical space or even bone destruction
Bladder tumours • Growth pattern in-situ > papillary > infiltrating > ulcerating • TCC: 90%
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• • • •
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SCC: 1.5-10% Adeno Ca: 1% (bladder exstrophy and urachal remnants) Stomach and Breast ca may metastasize to bladder CP: hematuria dysuria pelvic pain hydronephrosis Associations: carcinogens present in cigarette smoke, aromatic amines, cyclophosphamides 6th-7th decade M>F ⅓ multifocal at presentation usually around the trigone or around lateral walls IVU/cystogram/US: mass projecting into the bladder lumen CT: useful for showing distant mets/perivesical invasion (T3b) cannot distinguish between lesions limited to lamina propria (T1) and invading superficial (T2a) and deep muscle (T2b) MR: better than CT for bladder base and dome tumours and differentiation between T3a and T4 disease. May distinguish between T2a and T2b by the integrity of the bladder wall ‘black line’ T2: slightly hyperintense to bladder muscle Treatment confined to wall or limited spread - resection superficial - BCG extensive - systemic chemo, palliative radiotherapy Staging: read about staging here
Bladder injury • Intraperitoneal: 10-20% (follows blunt trauma, usually at dome. Requires surgery) • Extraperitoneal: 80-90% - usually anterolateral walls of base - associated with disruption of urogenital diaphragm. Flame-shaped appearance. Urine seen in: paracolic gutters perivesical fat anterior abdominal wall upper thigh • subserosal: rare - characterized by elliptical invasion adjacent to bladder • CT cystography: Imaging of choice
Scrotal injury • US: imaging of choice • Scrotal hematoma: echogenic collection btwn tunica dartos and tunica vaginalis or within septum
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• Hematocele: complex collection between leaves of tunica vaginalis • Hydrocele: liquefied hematoma or serous collection between the layers of tunica vaginalis (echolucency around testes) • Testicular rupture • Testicular dislocation
Prostate • Acute and chronic prostatitis usually staphylococci or E.coli • Granulomatous prostatitis non-specific: more common, results from escape of prostatic contents, bacterial products of urine into prostatic tissue specific: produced by known etiological agent (Mycobacterium, schistosomiasis, fungal) • Prostatic TB almost always secondary to TB elsewhere • Prostatic abscess • Benign prostatic hypertrophy 50-75% of men over 60 years, more common in patients with DM, HT, Afro-Caribbean’s Bladder volume >30mL J-shaped or fishhook ureters Trabeculation of bladder and diverticulum formation
Prostate sarcoma • Rhabdomyosarcoma in children more common • Leiomyosarcoma in adults more common
Prostate cancer • TNM staging: read about staging here
Urethra • Mullerian duct cyst: Mullerian duct is obliterated and usually forms verumontanum. Incomplete obliteration leads to cyst formation between bladder and rectum • Prostatic utricle: cavity communicating with posterior urethra, derived from caudal Mullerian duct • Posterior urethral valve: thickened mucosal folds within posterior urethra. Located near distal verumontanum and result from abnormal migration of mucosal folds (Wolffian duct remnants) Type 1: two mucosal folds at the level of the verumontanum with an anterior opening. Did this document help you? Consider a donation Can you make this document better? Email [email protected]
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Type 3: has a pin-point eccentric opening resulting in forward ballooning of the valve giving a wind-in-sail appearance
Urethral diverticulum • F>M • Higher incidence of carcinoma
Urethritis • Gonococcal > Chlamydia t. > Ureaplasma u. > TB > Schistosomiasis • Urethrography: luminal irregularity with filling defects representing sloughed mucosa • Strictures Treatment: balloon dilatation Inflammatory (usually proximal urethra) Traumatic (usually bulbomembranous) Iatrogenic Neoplastic (rare) • Benign tumors (rare): papillary adenoma, squamous cell papilloma, Trans cell papilloma, nephrogenic adenoma, inflammatory and fibrous polyps (1-2 cm long processes around verumontanum presenting with intermittent obstruction) • Carcinomas (2F:1M) LND spread before hematogenic! SCC 60%, TCC 20%, adeno ca 10%, undiff and sarcoma 8%, melanoma 2% Anterior urethral tumours: distal ⅓ with early presentation and better prognosis • ☞ Tumours involving external meatus spread to superficial and deep inguinal lymph nodes Posterior urethral tumours: arise from proximal ⅔, present later with poor diff and more advanced grade ➢ Spread to hypogastric, external iliac and sacral nodes In males (risk factors - previous strictures) ➢ TCC of prostatic urethra most common, with strong association with bladder TCC ➢ Carcinoma in the remainder of the urethra strongly associated with inflammation, 75% SCC. ➢ Penile urethra: drainage along ventral surface to the superficial and deep inguinal lymph nodes ➢ Bulbar/membranous urethra: drainage along dorsal vein of penis to external iliac nodes -> obturator -> hypogastric MRI: method of choice Staging: read about staging here
Urethral injury • usually around membranous urethra (posterior)
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• • • • • •
20% of pelvic fractures in men. Impotence may develop in up to 40% of patients. Uncommon in females Type 1: stretched and narrowed urethra secondary to hematoma elevating bladder (no tear) Type 2: tear above urogenital diaphragm Type 3: tear below urogenital diaphragm (almost always complete) complete tears - require surgical repair no contrast in bladder during retrograde urography • Incomplete: catheterized and usually not operated some contrast in bladder during retrograde urography • Retrograde urography: imaging of choice contrast in retropubic space (type 2) contrast in perineum (type 3)
Testicles • 3.5-4 cm • covered by fibrous capsule, tunica albuginea
Orchitis • most common complication of mumps infection in postpubertal males • more commonly unilateral • US: swelling, homogeneously hypoechoic increased vascularity
Cryptorchidism • 80% found in inguinal region, usually palpable (BL in 10-25% of cases) • Risk factor for subfertility (even in unilateral) and testicular tumour • Prevalence parallels gestational age 100% of neonates 2.5kg 10days Intravaginal: older age group and most common associated with bell clapper deformity
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• Extravaginal: affects infants and is rare (the testis and tunica vaginalis twist at the external ring)
Torsion of the testicular appendix (hydatid of Morgagni) • most common cause of acute scrotal pain in children
Primary testicular malignancies • 1% of male malignancies • most common malignancy in 15-30 year old males • Germ cell origin (95%) Seminoma (40%) 40-50yr olds ➢ Increased chance in patients with undescended testes. Non-seminomatous germ cell tumour (NSGCT) (60%) 30-40yr olds ➢ Adults: embryonal > yolk sac > teratoma ➢ Children: rare in children, but if occur usually yolk sac tumour • Non-germ cell origin (Gonadal stromal tumour) (1%) ➢ Leydig (secreting androgens, but may also be feminizing), Sertoli (secreting estrogens), theca cell origin ➢ Usually benign but endocrinologically active • Lymphoma (4%): usually older men • CP: alpha-fetoprotein increased in 60% of patients bHCG increased in 50% (not pure seminomas!) • US: nonspecific, hypoechoic. Seminomas usually better defined hypoechogenic than NSGCTs. • CT: used for staging. Lymph nodes abnormal if >1 cm. LND metastasis to paraaortics first • Tx Seminoma: orchidectomy + para-aortic radiotherapy or orchidectomy + chemo for more advanced disease NSGCT: orchidectomy + paraaortic lymphadenectomy or orchidectomy + chemo for more advanced disease • Testicular mets: prostate > kidney > bronchus > pancreas > bladder > thyroid • Leukemia: testicular involvement seen in 50% of acute leukemia
Testicular cysts • Tunica albuginea cyst: upper anterior or lateral aspect of testis. Firm on palpation • epidermoid cyst: cystic, solid, avascular. ☞ whorled ‘onion-ring’ appearance. • Abscess: acute associated with epididymitis. chronic associated with TB • Tubular ectasia: dilatation of rete testes in older men DD: teratoma
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• Hydrocele: small amount of fluid surrounding testes normal. If acquired - think trauma, tumour, infection • Spermatocele: retention cyst at the head of epididymis • Epididymal cyst: retention cyst within anywhere in epididymis, no sperm inside.
Microlithiasis • annual follow-up advisable • larger calcifications seen in multiple tumour types
Undescended testes • root of testes 50%, within inguinal canal 20%, abdominal 10%, bilateral 10%
Epididymis • posterolateral to testes
Acute epididymitis • • • •
Most common acute scrotal pathology in postpubertal age group E.coli, Pseudomonas, Aerobacter, N.gonorrhoeae, Chlamydia TB epididymitis - secondary to prostatic TB US: swollen epididymis (>5mm) usually hypoechoic hyperaemia
Chronic epididymitis • US: swollen epididymis, hyperechoic
Varicocele • • • •
Tangle of veins measuring >2mm in diameter ☞ Commonest treatable cause of male infertility 95% on left side May be treated with embolisation coils used internal spermatic vein occluded
Erectile failure • Dynamic infusion cavernosometry
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needle insertion into corpus cavernosum, the amount of saline flow required to maintain an erection can be measured (should be 120mL/min). Papaverine of PGE2 can be used afterwards iodinated contrast cavernosogram performed ➢ Normal: no venous drainage ➢ Abnormal: leakage to veins • Doppler US: peak systolic velocity