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Query: UMLS:C0034067 (emphysema)
11,506 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Modern radiologic methods for assessment of parenchymal lung diseases are reviewed, with special reference to computed tomography (CT). In bronchogenic carcinoma and lung metastases CT is part of the initial workup, while in parenchymal lung diseases, emphysema and pulmonary infections CT should be used only for special indications. At present magnetic resonance imaging is inferior to CT in evaluating parenchymal lung diseases.
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PMID:[Imaging procedures in parenchymatous lung processes]. 305 73

Progress over the last 40 years has greatly reduced morbidity and mortality in the constantly changing field of thoracic surgery. The first part of this review focuses on current indications and limitations in lung surgery. Technical procedures for pneumonectomy, lobectomy, bronchial resection and conservative surgery are well established. Although major respiratory or cardiac failure still limit indications bronchogenic cancer extension is no longer a contraindication. Exeresis after 70 years of age is not an exception. Surgery for non-small cell lung cancer has given promising results with a 5-year survival rate of 60-80% for patients in stage I and II. For stage III, two recent comparative studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of preoperative adjuvant chemotherapy which should logically be proposed with or without radiotherapy in patients with resectable tumours. Surgical removal of lung metastases and mesotheliomas has also made considerable progress. Unfortunately, except for therapeutic trials, exeresis of small cell lung cancer does not provide any beneficial effect and cannot be proposed. Indications for surgery in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease however has been quite successful and now goes beyond classical exeresis of large compressive bullae. In many situations patients with diffuse emphysema can benefit from surgical reduction in lung volume before proposing transplantation. Lung transplantation is indicated for pulmonary fibrosis, pulmonary vascular disease and obstructive lung pulmonary disease with an overall survival rate of 50% at 5 years and 43% at 6 years. The rate of successful bilateral lung transplantation for cystic fibrosis remains to be determined.
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PMID:[New techniques in thoracic surgery. I]. 756 9

Clinical and X-Ray studies were performed in 85 patients with disseminated pulmonary tuberculosis. All the patients underwent routine computerized tomography (CT) and high-resolution CT. According to the pathogenetic process, the authors identified hematogenic (n = 38), lymphogenic (n = 19), bronchogenic (n = 18) and mixed (n = 10) disseminations. High-resolution CT was found to have great advantages in detecting various types of tuberculous disseminations and in assessing the pattern of pulmonary abnormalities. Disseminated tuberculosis was revealed in 7 patients who had no pathological changes on routine lung X-ray films. The specific signs of hematogenic, lymphogenic disseminations and bronchgenic inoculations were identified in other forms of pulmonary tuberculosis. CT symptomatology is shown to be determined by the pathogenetic variant of its development and the stage of the process. Small focal changes in the lung were prevalent in patients with acute and subacute hematogenic forms of the disease. Infiltrates with decay cavities, thin-wall caverns, emphysema and bronchoectases were detected over the chronic course. Lymphogenic disseminations were characterized by the predominance of interstitial changes along with multiple minor foci. High-resolution CT had advantages in identifying decay cavities, signs of fibrosis and in evaluating mediastinal lymph nodes. CT data are of great significance for differential diagnosis of disseminated tuberculosis with lung metastases and diffuse interstitial diseases.
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PMID:[Disseminated pulmonary tuberculosis: significance of high-resolution computerized tomography]. 1051 44

Lung diseases of children often need diagnostic imaging beyond X-ray. Although CT is considered the gold standard of lung imaging, MRI is sufficient to answer most of the questions raised. After all, the exposure to radiation caused by one CT examination corresponds to approximately the effective dose of 200 chest radiographs. What is MRI's potential in the lung today? In diseases with alveolar pathology, cardiac- and respiratory-triggered MRI examinations are roughly equivalent to CT examinations. Distinct interstitial processes are easily diagnosable using MRI. Early interstitial processes may be missed by MRI, but conventional plain films fail to recognize them just as often. For identification of lung metastases, CT is still used as the initial diagnostic measure. Subsequent therapy monitoring may then be carried out with the help of MRI. Small bullae and pulmonary emphysema at present pose a problem to MRI. On the other hand, MRI is reliable for follow-up examinations in inflammatory diseases or for imaging of complications, and the increased use of lung MRI as an alternative to chest CT may contribute immensely to reducing radiation exposure in children.
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PMID:MRI of the lungs in children. 1877 69

The purpose of this article is to report a case of hemoptysis occurring in combination with secondary spontaneous pneumothorax following chemical pleurodesis by talc. A Japanese male with cancer of renal pelvis was found with the left pneumothorax and multiple lung metastases. A computed-tomography scan revealed severe emphysema throughout the lungs. Talc pleurodesis was employed to arrest air leakage. The patient developed hemoptysis 45 minutes after talc injection into the thorax. This is the first report of hemoptysis following talc pleurodesis. The agent could induce severe inflammation in capillary vessels of the lung following visceral pleura infiltration.
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PMID:Hemoptysis following Talc Pleurodesis in a Pneumothorax Patient. 2912 33