1.Imaging findings of mimickers of hepatocellular carcinoma.
Tae Kyoung KIM ; Eunchae LEE ; Hyun Jung JANG
Clinical and Molecular Hepatology 2015;21(4):326-343
Radiological imaging plays a crucial role in the diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) as the noninvasive diagnosis of HCC in high-risk patients by typical imaging findings alone is widely adopted in major practice guidelines for HCC. While imaging techniques have markedly improved in detecting small liver lesions, they often detect incidental benign liver lesions and non-hepatocellular malignancy that can be misdiagnosed as HCC. The most common mimicker of HCC in cirrhotic liver is nontumorous arterioportal shunts that are seen as focal hypervascular liver lesions on dynamic contrast-enhanced cross-sectional imaging. Rapidly enhancing hemangiomas can be easily misdiagnosed as HCC especially on MR imaging with liver-specific contrast agent. Focal inflammatory liver lesions mimic HCC by demonstrating arterial-phase hypervascularity and subsequent washout on dynamic contrast-enhanced imaging. It is important to recognize the suggestive imaging findings for intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (CC) as the management of CC is largely different from that of HCC. There are other benign mimickers of HCC such as angiomyolipomas and focal nodular hyperplasia-like nodules. Recognition of their typical imaging findings can reduce false-positive HCC diagnosis.
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/*diagnosis/radiography
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Hemangioma/complications/radiography/ultrasonography
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Hepatitis B/complications
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Humans
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Inflammation/radiography/ultrasonography
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Liver/radiography/ultrasonography
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Liver Cirrhosis/complications/radiography
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Liver Neoplasms/*diagnosis/radiography
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease/radiography/ultrasonography
2.A Case of Pleural Effusion Associated with Acute Hepatits A.
Dong Il KIM ; Jae Ock PARK ; Chang Hwi KIM
Korean Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition 2005;8(2):243-246
Pleural effusion represents a rare complication of acute hepatitis A infection. Twelve year-old girl was admitted with complaints of general weakness, nausea and icteric sclerae. She also complained of right chest pain. Right decubitus view of chest radiograph showed pleural fluid accumulation. Laboratory findings were as follows: AST/ALT 1692/1970 IU/L, total/direct bilirubin 4.48/3.66 mg/dL and HA IgM Ab (+). On the seventh day of hospitalization, her general condition was much improved and chest radiography showed resolved pleural effusion.
Bilirubin
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Chest Pain
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Female
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Hepatitis A
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Hospitalization
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Humans
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Immunoglobulin M
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Nausea
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Pleural Effusion*
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Radiography
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Radiography, Thoracic
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Sclera
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Thorax
3.A case of Fulminant Mycoplasma Pneumonia Complicated with ARDS and Hemolytic Anemia.
Jae Sik KWAG ; Tae Young KO ; Byung Sun CHUNG ; Sung Bae LEE ; Kyung Suk OH ; Se Jong PARK ; Myung Sun KIM
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 1998;45(3):636-642
The frequency of fulminant peumonia due to Mycoplasma pneumoniae is relatively rare despite the high prevalence of Mycoplasma species infection in the general population We report a case of mycoplasma pneumonia complicated with severe ARDS, overt hemolytic anemia and hepatitis. He had high titers of antimycoplasma antibody and cold agglutinin. Despite erythromycin administration, the pneumonic infiltration on chest radiography was not resolved, and mechanical ventilation was needed for 16 days. During the therapeutic course, his hemoglobin decreased. After the administration of prednisolone, his hemoglobin increased and pneumonic infitration was totally resolved. He had a progressively favorable course and could be discharged in relatively good clinical condition.
Anemia, Hemolytic*
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Erythromycin
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Hepatitis
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Mycoplasma pneumoniae
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Mycoplasma*
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Pneumonia, Mycoplasma*
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Prednisolone
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Prevalence
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Radiography
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Respiration, Artificial
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Thorax
4.Well-differentiated Hepatocellular Carcinoma.
Joon Koo HAN ; Soo Jin KIM ; Se Hyung KIM
The Korean Journal of Hepatology 2007;13(3):427-431
5.A Case of Pleural Effusion Associated with Acute Hepatitis A.
Young Sun KO ; Ki Deok YOO ; Yil Sik HYUN ; Hae Ryoung CHUNG ; Soo Yuk PARK ; Sun Min KIM ; Yong Cheol JEON
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2010;55(3):198-202
Hepatitis A virus (HAV) infection is common in developing countries, including Korea. It can be accompanied by extrahepatic complications such as renal failure, arthritis, and vasculitis. Pleural effusion is a very rare complication of HAV infection, which has been reported usually in children, and has benign clinical courses. Here we report a case of pleural effusion with ascites which occurred in an adult hepatitis A patient. A 26-year-old-woman presented generalized myalgia and fever and was diagnosed as acute hepatitis A. Despite of the improvement of laboratory findings, fever and cough persisted. Pleural effusion newly appeared on the serial chest radiologic images. After the fever settled down, the pleural effusion resolved spontaneously at 13th day of admission.
Acute Disease
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Adult
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Female
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Hepatitis A/complications/*diagnosis
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Humans
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Pleural Effusion/complications/*diagnosis/radiography
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed
6.Hepatic myelopathy as a presenting neurological complication in patients with cirrhosis and spontaneous splenorenal shunt.
Ja Eun KOO ; Young Suk LIM ; Sun Jeong MYUNG ; Kyung Suk SUH ; Kang Mo KIM ; Han Chu LEE ; Young Hwa CHUNG ; Yung Sang LEE ; Dong Jin SUH
The Korean Journal of Hepatology 2008;14(1):89-96
Hepatic myelopathy is a rare complication of chronic liver disease that is associated with extensive portosystemic shunts. The main clinical feature of hepatic myelopathy is progressive spastic paraparesis in the absence of sensory or sphincter impairment. Early and accurate diagnosis of hepatic myelopathy is important because patients with early stages of the disease can fully recover following liver transplantation. Motor-evoked potential studies may be suitable for the early diagnosis of hepatic myelopathy, even in patients with preclinical stages of the disease. Here we describe two patients who presented with spastic paraparesis associated with a spontaneous splenorenal shunt and without any previous episode of hepatic encephalopathy. One patient experienced improved neurologic symptoms after liver transplantation, whereas the other patient only received medical treatment, which did not prevent the progression of spastic paraparesis.
Adult
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Disease Progression
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Evoked Potentials, Motor/physiology
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Hepatitis B, Chronic/complications/diagnosis
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Hepatitis C, Chronic/complications/diagnosis
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Humans
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Liver Cirrhosis/*complications/diagnosis
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Liver Transplantation
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Paraparesis, Spastic/etiology/pathology
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Renal Veins/*radiography
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Spinal Cord Diseases/*diagnosis/etiology/radiography
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Splenic Vein/*radiography
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed
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Vascular Fistula/*radiography
7.Clinical Features of Fitz-Hugh-Curtis Syndrome in the Emergency Department.
Je Sung YOU ; Min Joung KIM ; Hyun Soo CHUNG ; Yong Eun CHUNG ; Incheol PARK ; Sung Phil CHUNG ; Seungho KIM ; Hahn Shick LEE
Yonsei Medical Journal 2012;53(4):753-758
PURPOSE: Fitz-Hugh-Curtis Syndrome (FHCS) is a clinical entity characterized by inflammation of the liver capsule associated with genital tract infection. The aim of this study is to provide physicians with clinical suggestions for diagnostic approaches based on a series of patients who were diagnosed with FHCS. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We conducted a retrospective study of patients who were diagnosed with FHCS after presenting to the emergency department (ED). The symptoms, physical examinations, laboratory findings, radiological findings, and progress of the patients were reviewed. RESULTS: During the four-year study period, a total of 82 female patients received a final diagnosis of FHCS in the ED. Chlamydia trachomatis was identified as a pathogen in 89% of the patients. Their clinical characteristics and laboratory findings were described. Fifty-two patients (63.4%) were admitted to the hospital. All of the admitted patients improved after treatment combining antibiotic therapy with conservative care. CONCLUSION: FHCS should be considered as a differential diagnosis for female patients of childbearing age with right upper abdominal pain. Timely diagnosis using biphasic computed tomography (CT) with arterial and portal phases may help ensure adequate medical treatment as well as avoid invasive procedures.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use
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Chlamydia Infections/drug therapy/microbiology/*pathology/radiography
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Chlamydia trachomatis/pathogenicity
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Emergency Service, Hospital
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Female
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Hepatitis/drug therapy/microbiology/*pathology/radiography
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Humans
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease/drug therapy/microbiology/*pathology/radiography
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Peritonitis/drug therapy/microbiology/*pathology/radiography
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Reproductive Tract Infections/drug therapy/microbiology/pathology/radiography
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Retrospective Studies
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed
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Young Adult
8.Hepatogastric fistula caused by direct invasion of hepatocellular carcinoma after transarterial chemoembolization and radiotherapy.
Hana PARK ; Seung Up KIM ; Junjeong CHOI ; Jun Yong PARK ; Sang Hoon AHN ; Kwang Hyub HAN ; Chae Yoon CHON ; Young Nyun PARK ; Do Young KIM
The Korean Journal of Hepatology 2010;16(4):401-404
A 63-year-old man with a history of hepatitis-B-related hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in the left lateral portion of the liver received repeated transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE) and salvage radiotherapy. Two months after completing radiotherapy, he presented with dysphagia, epigastric pain, and a protruding abdominal mass. Computed tomography showed that the bulging mass was directly invading the adjacent stomach. Endoscopy revealed a fistula from the HCC invading the stomach. Although the size of the mass had decreased with the drainage through the fistula, and his symptoms had gradually improved, he died of cancer-related bleeding and hepatic failure. This represents a case in which an HCC invaded the stomach and caused a hepatogastric fistula after repeated TACE and salvage radiotherapy.
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/complications/radiography/*therapy
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*Chemoembolization, Therapeutic
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Drainage
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Gastric Fistula/*etiology
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Gastroscopy
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Hepatitis B/diagnosis
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Humans
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Liver Diseases/*etiology
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Liver Neoplasms/complications/radiography/*therapy
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Neoplasm Invasiveness
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Stomach/pathology
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed
9.CT Diagnosis of Fitz-Hugh and Curtis Syndrome: Value of the Arterial Phase Scan.
Seung Ho JOO ; Myeong Jin KIM ; Joon Seok LIM ; Joo Hee KIM ; Ki Whang KIM
Korean Journal of Radiology 2007;8(1):40-47
OBJECTIVE: We wanted to evaluate the role of the arterial phase (AP) together with the portal venous phase (PP) scans in the diagnosis of Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome (FHCS) with using computed tomography (CT). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-five patients with FHCS and 25 women presenting with non-specifically diagnosed acute abdominal pain and who underwent biphasic CT examinations were evaluated. The AP scan included the upper abdomen, and the PP scan included the whole abdomen. Two radiologists blindly and retrospectively reviewed the PP scans first and then they reviewed the AP plus PP scans. The diagnostic accuracy of FHCS on each image set was compared for each reader by analyzing the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (Az). Weighted kappa (wk) statistics were used to measure the interobserver agreement for the presence of CT signs of the pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) on the PP images and FHCS as the diagnosis based on the increased perihepatic enhancement on both sets of images. RESULTS: The individual diagnostic accuracy of FHCS was higher on the biphasic images (Az = 0.905 and 0.942 for reader 1 and 2, respectively) than on the PP images alone (Az = 0.806 and 0.706, respectively). The interobserver agreement for the presence of PID on the PP images was moderate (wk = 0.530). The interobserver agreement for FHCS as the diagnosis was moderate on only the PP images (wk = 0.413), but it was substantial on the biphasic images (wk = 0.719). CONCLUSION: Inclusion of the AP scan is helpful to depict the increased perihepatic enhancement, and it improves the diagnostic accuracy of FHCS on CT.
Tomography, X-Ray Computed/*methods
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Syndrome
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Retrospective Studies
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ROC Curve
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease/*radiography
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Middle Aged
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Iopamidol/diagnostic use
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Humans
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Hepatitis/*radiography
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Female
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Contrast Media
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Adult
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Adolescent
10.Two Cases of Pulmonary Complications Following Intravesical Bacillus Calmette-Guerin Immunotherapy in Patients with Superficial Bladder Cancer.
Gyeoi Seong LEE ; Gi Yong LEE ; Jae Cheol YOON ; Dong Jib NA ; Seong Su JEONG ; Chong Koo SUL ; Sun Young KIM ; Ju Ock KIM
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 1999;46(6):869-878
Intravesical instillation of the bacillus Calmentte-Gu rin(BCG), an attenuated strain of Mycobacterium bovis, is an approved method for the treatment of superficial bladder cancer. Because BCG is a living organism, the potential for infection exists. BCG is generally well tolerated, with complications in less than 5% of those treated with use of current practices. The most frequent symptoms of toxicity associated with intravesical BCG immunotherapy include bladder irritation, frequency, and dysuria. Systemic reactions are less common but more serious than local side effects, and include fever, chills, malaise, rash, hepatitis, pneumonitis, arthritis and sepsis. In rare cases, BCG treatment can result in a systemic infection that requires antituberculous therapy. The pulmonary toxicity that results from intravesical BCG treatment is generally characterized by one of two types : systemic allergic reaction with pulmonary reticulonodular opacities depicted on chest radiographs with cellular findings consisting of activated lymphocytes, and actual BCG mycobacteremia with a miliary pattern depicted on chest radiographs and granuloma formation which rarely results in positive acid-fast stain or culture results. Recently we experienced two types of pulmonary complications following intravesical BCG immunotherapy in patients with superficial bladder cancer. We report two cases with a review of literatures.
Administration, Intravesical
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Arthritis
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Bacillus*
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Chills
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Dysuria
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Exanthema
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Fever
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Granuloma
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Hepatitis
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Humans
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Hypersensitivity
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Immunotherapy*
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Lymphocytes
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Mycobacterium bovis
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Pneumonia
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Radiography, Thoracic
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Sepsis
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Urinary Bladder Neoplasms*
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Urinary Bladder*