1.Inflammatory Pseudotumor of the Extraorbital Head and Neck: CT and MR Imaging Findings.
Eun Jin RHO ; Jae Wook RYOOG ; Dong Gyu NA ; Sam Soo KIM ; Heon HAN ; Choon Hwan HAN ; Ski Kyung LEE
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 2002;46(5):441-448
PURPOSE: To determine the MR and CT imaging findings of inflammatory pseudotumor of the extraorbital head and neck. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We reviewed the MR (n=10) and CT (n=9) imaging studies of 11 patients with this condition (M:F=5:6, age range: 35-75 years), analysing each case in terms of location, occupying space, signal intensity, intracranial involvement, degree of contrast enhancement and adjacent bone change. Follow-up images were obtained in nine cases, and the response of each patient to steroid treatment was reviewed. RESULTS: Lesions involved the masticator space (n=8), the buccal space (n=6), the nasopharynx (n=5), the paranasal sinus (n=4), the parapharyngeal space (n=3), the prevertebral space (n=2), the orbit (n=2), the carotid space (n=2), the paravertebral space (n=1), parotid space (n=1), and the oral cavity (n=1). In ten of eleven cases, there was adjacent bone change. In three cases, the cavernous sinus was involved, and in two, the dura. One case involved both of them. At T2-weighted imaging, the lesions showed hypointensity in nine of ten cases; in four of nine, signal intensity was markedly low, and in no case was it diffusely high. In five of nine cases, the mass decreased in size after steroid therapy. CONCLUSION: Inflammatory pseudotumor showed iso-to hypointensity at T2-weighted imaging. Lymphadenopathy was not apparent.
Cavernous Sinus
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Granuloma, Plasma Cell*
;
Head*
;
Humans
;
Lymphatic Diseases
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
;
Mouth
;
Nasopharynx
;
Neck*
;
Orbit
2.Thrombi in Main Pulmonary Artery Detected by Echocardiography
Kang Hyun LEE ; Sung Oh HWANG ; Kyoung Soo LIM ; Young Ski KIM ; Moo Eob AHN ; Yoon Kyung CHO ; Jung Han YOON ; Keum Soo PARK ; Kyung Hoon CHOE
Journal of the Korean Society of Echocardiography 1994;2(2):225-228
Clinical diagnosis of pulmonary thromboembolism is very difficult because clinical manifestations are nonspecific. Considering that this disease is life-threatening, prompt diagnosis and early treatment is critical in early course of the disease process. Emergency echocardiography can provide diagnostic hints for pulmonary thromboembolism. This report describes a woman who complained unexplained dyspnea and hypoxia, and was diagnosed with thromboembolism of main pulmonary artery detected by emergency echocardiography.
Anoxia
;
Diagnosis
;
Dyspnea
;
Echocardiography
;
Emergencies
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Pulmonary Artery
;
Pulmonary Embolism
;
Thromboembolism