scholarly journals PTH-75 The utility of plain chest radiographs to detect perforation after endoscopic stenting for oesophageal cancer

Author(s):  
Daniel Maggs ◽  
Hannah Thould ◽  
Ben Colleypriest
1990 ◽  
Vol 155 (4) ◽  
pp. 729-734 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Stark ◽  
S Thordarson ◽  
M McKinney

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 203-212
Author(s):  
Miaad Ahmed ◽  
Shaymaa Mustafa Khalid Al-Hayali

Bronchogenic carcinoma should be a topic of paramount importance to all who interpret chest radiographs because of its increasing incidence. For several decades the disease has been underestimated in the developing world. A prospective study was carried out on 52 patients (43 males, 9 females) with primary bronchogenic carcinoma at Oncology Teaching Hospital/Medical City-Baghdad from October 2016 to March 2017. All patients had standard plain chest radiographs (postero-anterior, and lateral views). Any abnormality detected was further studied with conventional tomography. The diagnosis was confirmed by histopathology examinations for all patients who were clinically evaluated by other methods of investigations. Most patients had more than one radiological feature which were mainly pulmonary masses, either hilar or peripheral or both at the same time. Other less common features were; mediastinal adenopathy (27%), atelactasis (25%) and pleural effusion (21%). Radiological signs that determine inoperability were evaluated together with other factors that were used as basic principles in the assessment of inoperability. From the total of fifty-two patients; 45 (86.5%) were inoperable radiologically and clinically, and also 4 patients (57%) out of the 7 who underwent thoracotomy were inoperable due to invasion and adhesion to the vessels and other vital structures. The chest radiograph is still important, cheap and available diagnostic procedure in lung cancer, and to decide further management.


Author(s):  
Masamichi Mineshita ◽  
Takeo Inoue ◽  
Teruomi Miyazawa ◽  
Hiroki Nishine ◽  
HIrotaka Kida ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Y.C. (Gary) Lee ◽  
Christina K. Runnion ◽  
S.C. Pang ◽  
Nicholas H. de Klerk ◽  
A. William Musk

2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 162-167
Author(s):  
Daniel Owen Mort ◽  
◽  
Dipraj Limbu ◽  
Joseph Nunan ◽  
Andrew P. Walden ◽  
...  

COVID-19 pneumonia produces a heterogeneous array of clinical, biochemical, and radiological findings. Over the last few months of global hurry to optimize a testing strategy, it has been suggested that bedside point-of-care lung ultrasound may have a diagnostic role. We present 3 patients with RT-PCR nasopharyngeal swab-confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia, who had an admission plain chest film reported to be normal by a consultant radiologist, but with significant sonographic abnormalities on bedside ultrasound performed within 24 hours of the chest radiograph. Lung ultrasound may better correlate with the oxygen requirement and overall condition of the patient than chest radiographs – a pertinent consideration given the imminent advance of the pandemic into resource-poor zones where timely access to roentgenological imaging may be sparse.


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