Contrast enhanced CT was performed in seven patients with pancreatic disease (chronic pancreatitis, n = 3; pancreatic head cancer, n = 2; mucin-producing pancreatic tumor, n = 2) who showed dilation of the main pancreatic duct (MPD) Minimum intensity projection (Min-IP) images of the pancreas were obtained using multi-projection volume reconstruction (MPVR) software by selecting an oblique slab that contained the entire MPD. Curved reformation (CR) images were obtained using multiplanar reformation (MPR) software by tracing the MPD on the Min-IP image. Both Min-IP images and CR images clearly showed the dilated main pancreatic duct in all seven patients. In three of the seven, obstruction of the MPD in the pancreatic head and the cause of obstruction (tumor mass, n = 2; caliculus, n = 1) were also clearly seen. Min-IP and CR images seem to be useful for the diagnosis of pancreatic diseases.
To clarify the normal range of articular cartilage volumes of the patella and femur in the human knee joints of healthy adults using three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging and to analyze the correlation of the articular volumes with the background characteristics. Fifty seven knees of 57 healthy volunteers aged from twenties to forties (30 males and 27 females), who had no past history of joint disease or trauma in the legs, were imaged by a fat-suppressed three-dimensional sequence (SPGR; 1.5T GE; Horizon LX 8.2.5) The obtained data were analyzed by 4 examiners independently with a computer workstation, and a average of the four was adopted as the articular volume. Analyzed characteristics factors of the volunteers were: age, body weight, height, leg length, foot size, circumference of the thigh and lower leg, quadriceps angle, foot angle, body-mass index, and general laxity. The mean articular cartilage volume was 7.2 +- 1.6 ml. It was significantly larger in males than in females. Concerning the relationship between the volume and the characteristic factors, there was a significant correlation of the cartilage volume with the foot size in males (r=0.47), and with height, leg length and foot size in females (r=0.53, 0.60, 0.60, respectively), but no significant correlation with the other factors. Conclusion. The articular cartilage volumes of the patella and femur was 7.2+- 1.6 ml. The size of skeletal structure, especially the skeletal size of the lower extremity, were assumed to be important factors in estimating cartilage volume.
Helical computed tomography was performed with intravenous contrast material administration in ten patients with hepatic tumors (metastatic tumor, n = 6; hepatocellular carcinoma, n = 4). Maximum intensity projection (MIP) images of intrahepatic portal venous branches and hepatic veins, and shaded surface display (SSD) images of the hepatic tumors were reconstructed for each patient. The MIP image and SSD image were fitted to overlap on a single display to obtain three-dimensional (3-D) images showing both the hepatic vessels and hepatic tumors. Subsegmental localization of the tumors determined from the 3-D images proved to be correct in all of the six patients who received hepatic resection after examination. 3-D images seem to be useful for preoperative assessment of hepatic tumors.
A case of retroperitoneal myolipoma is reported. A 55‐year‐old woman with the main complaint of an abdominal mass was admitted to Teikyo University Hospital, Tokyo, Japan. Retroperitoneal liposarcoma was suspected based on magnetic resonance imaging, and the tumor was resected. The resected tumor was well encapsulated and 30 × 15 × 8 cm in size. Histologically, it consisted of mature adipose cells and smooth muscle cells. Neither nuclear atypia nor mitosis was observed in either component. The tumor was pathologically diagnosed as myolipoma of the retroperitoneum. Retroperitoneal myolipoma is often misdiagnosed radiologically as liposarcoma because the overwhelming majority of large retroperitoneal tumor containing fat is liposarcoma, however, the clinical course of myolipoma is quite different from that of liposarcoma. Although myolipoma is very rare, pathologists should consider it in the differential diagnosis of fat‐containing retroperitoneal masses.
Sixty-one CT scans in 20 patients who had undergone head and neck reconstructive surgery using a pectoralis major myocutaneous (PM-MC) flap were retrospectively evaluated to assess the usefulness of CT in the follow-up of these patients. The normal CT findings in patients with PM-MC flaps are described. Of 13 cases with tumor recurrence, CT examination correctly detected recurrent masses in all cases, including 3 in which there was no clinical sign of recurrence. Postoperative masses mimicking tumor recurrence included deformed breast tissue, hematomas, lymphoceles, and abscesses. Computed tomography was of great value in the detection of tumor recurrence, but careful interpretation is required because a postoperative complication or anatomic alteration may lead to the erroneous diagnosis of tumor recurrence.